Severe periprocedural complications after ablation for atrial fibrillation: An international collaborative individual patient data registry Journal Article


Authors: du Fay de Lavallaz, J.; Badertscher, P.; Ghannam, M.; Oral, H.; Jongnarangsin, K.; Boveda, S.; Madeira, M.; Gupta, D.; Ding, W. Y.; Providencia, R.; MacLean, E.; Tokuda, M.; Tokutake, K.; Reichlin, T.; Zhang, F.; Scherr, D.; Popa, M. A.; Huang, H.; Pavlović, N.; Peigh, G.; Li, X.; Davtyan, K.; Kosmidou, I.; Anselmino, M.; Jain, S.; Squara, F.; Nof, E.; Matta, M.; Kojodjojo, P.; Khoueiry, Z.; Knecht, S.; Krisai, P.; Sticherling, C.; Kühne, M.
Article Title: Severe periprocedural complications after ablation for atrial fibrillation: An international collaborative individual patient data registry
Abstract: Background: Catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) including pulmonary vein isolation and possibly further substrate ablation is the most common electrophysiological procedure. Severe complications are uncommon, but their detailed assessment in a large worldwide cohort is lacking. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of periprocedural severe complications and to provide a detailed characterization of the diagnostic evaluation and management of these complications in patients undergoing AF ablation. Methods: Individual patient data were collected from 23 centers worldwide. Limited data were collected for all patients who underwent catheter ablation, and an expanded series of data points were collected for patients who experienced severe complications during periprocedural follow-up. Incidence, predictors, patient characteristics, management details, and overall outcomes of patients who experienced ablation-related complications were investigated. Results: Data were collected from 23 participating centers at which 33,879 procedures were performed (median age 63 years, 30% women, 71% radiofrequency ablations). The incidence of severe complications (n = 271) was low (tamponade 6.8‰, stroke 0.97‰, cardiac arrest 0.41‰, esophageal fistula 0.21‰, and death 0.21‰). Age, female sex, a dilated left atrium, procedure duration, and the use of radiofrequency energy were independently associated with the composite endpoint of all severe complications. Among patients experiencing tamponade, 13% required cardiac surgery. Ninety-three percent of patients with complications were discharged directly home after a median length of stay of 5 days (Q1-Q3: 3-7 days). Conclusions: This large worldwide collaborative study highlighted that tamponade, stroke, cardiac arrest, esophageal fistula, and death are rare after AF ablation. Older age, female sex, procedure duration, a dilated left atrium, and the use of radiofrequency energy were associated with severe complications in this multinational cohort. One in 8 patients with tamponade required cardiac surgery. © 2024 The Authors
Keywords: adult; controlled study; aged; middle aged; major clinical study; clinical trial; follow up; incidence; cohort analysis; age; postoperative complication; postoperative complications; length of stay; disease severity; register; registries; diagnostic value; multicenter study; stroke; operation duration; patient coding; surgery; complications; hospital discharge; sex difference; epidemiology; radiofrequency ablation; atrial fibrillation; radiofrequency; catheter ablation; cardiac arrest; heart arrest; heart surgery; cerebrovascular accident; predictors; heart tamponade; cardiac tamponade; etiology; cardiovascular risk factor; adverse event; heart left atrium; tamponade; energy resource; cardiovascular mortality; esophagus fistula; humans; human; male; female; article; esophageal fistula; intracardiac echocardiography; patient registry; electrophysiologist; pulmonary vein isolation; left atrial dilatation
Journal Title: JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology
Volume: 10
Issue: 7
ISSN: 2405-500X
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2024-07-01
Start Page: 1353
End Page: 1364
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacep.2024.03.024
PUBMED: 38819347
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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