Best anticoagulation strategy with and without appendage occlusion for stroke‐prophylaxis in postablation atrial fibrillation patients with cardiac amyloidosis

Author:

Mohanty Sanghamitra1ORCID,Torlapati Prem Geeta1,La Fazia Vincenzo Mirco1,Kurt Merve12,Gianni Carola1ORCID,MacDonald Bryan1,Mayedo Angel1,Allison John1,Bassiouny Mohamed1,Gallinghouse G. Joseph1,Burkhardt John D.1,Horton Rodney1,Di Biase Luigi3ORCID,Al‐Ahmad Amin1ORCID,Natale Andrea1456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electrophysiology, Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute St. David's Medical Center Austin Texas USA

2. Department of Internal Medicine Mount Auburn Hospital Cambridge Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Electrophysiology Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Montefiore Hospital New York New York USA

4. Department of Interventional Electrophysiology Interventional Electrophysiology, Scripps Clinic San Diego California USA

5. Department of Internal Medicine, Metro Health Medical Center Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine Cleveland Ohio USA

6. Department of Biomedicine and Prevention, Division of Cardiology University of Tor Vergata Rome Italy

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionBoth atrial fibrillation (AF) and amyloidosis increase stroke risk. We evaluated the best anticoagulation strategy in AF patients with coexistent amyloidosis.MethodsConsecutive AF patients with concomitant amyloidosis were divided into two groups based on the postablation stroke‐prophylaxis approach; group 1: left atrial appendage occlusion (LAAO) in eligible patients and group 2: oral anticoagulation (OAC). Group 1 patients were further divided into Gr. 1A: LAAO + half‐does NOAC (HD‐NOAC) for 6 months followed by aspirin 81 mg/day and Gr. 1B: LAAO + HD‐NOAC. In group 1 patients, with complete occlusion at the 45‐day transesophageal echocardiogram, patients were switched to aspirin, 81 mg/day at 6 months. In case of leak, or dense “smoke” in the left atrium (LA) or enlarged LA, they were placed on long‐term half‐dose (HD) NOAC. Group 2 patients remained on full‐dose NOAC during the whole study period.ResultsA total of 92 patients were included in the analysis; group 1: 56 and group 2: 36. After the 45‐day TEE, 31 patients from group 1 remained on baby‐aspirin and 25 on HD NOAC. At 1‐year follow‐up, four stroke, one TIA and six device‐thrombus were reported in group 1A, compared to none in patients in group 1B (5/31 vs. 0/25, p = .03). No bleeding events were reported in group 1, whereas group 2 had five bleeding events (one subdural hematoma, one retinal hemorrhage, and four GI bleedings). Additionally, one stroke was reported in group 2 that happened during brief discontinuation of OAC.ConclusionIn patients with coexistent AF and amyloidosis, half‐dose NOAC following LAAO was observed to be the safest stroke‐prophylaxis strategy.

Publisher

Wiley

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