Super and Nonresponders to Catheter Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation: A Quality-of-Life Assessment Using Patient Reported Outcomes

Author:

Farwati Medhat1ORCID,Wazni Oussama M.2ORCID,Tarakji Khaldoun G.2ORCID,Diab Mohamed2ORCID,Scandinaro Anna1ORCID,Amin Mustapha1,Zmaili Mohammad1ORCID,Bazarbashi Najdat3ORCID,Dikilitas Ozan4ORCID,Nakagawa Hiroshi2ORCID,Kuroda Shunsuke2ORCID,Kanj Mohamed,Dresing Thomas J.2ORCID,Callahan Thomas D.2ORCID,Bhargava Mandeep2,Baranowski Bryan2,Rickard John2ORCID,Cantillon Daniel J.2,Tchou Patrick J.2ORCID,Saliba Walid I.2ORCID,Hussein Ayman A.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine (M.F., A.S., M.A., M.Z.), Cleveland Clinic, OH.

2. Heart and Vascular Institute (O.M.W., K.G.T., M.D., H.N., S.K., M.K., T.J.D., T.D.C., M.B., B.B., J.R., D.J.C., P.J.T., W.I.S., A.A.H.), Cleveland Clinic, OH.

3. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Maryland, Baltimore (N.B.).

4. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN (O.D.).

Abstract

Background: Atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation targets improvement in quality of life (QoL). Data is scarce on predictors of QoL improvement following ablation. We aimed to investigate the clinical characteristics underlying differential response in QoL after AF ablation (with or without arrhythmia recurrence). Methods: All patients undergoing AF ablation (2013–2016) at our center were prospectively enrolled in a fully automated patient-reported outcomes registry. A large number of variables were collected including AF symptom severity scale and AF burden (as indicated by AF frequency and duration scores). Patients were divided into 3 groups based on self-report of QoL improvement: remarkable (super responders), mild/moderate, and unchanged or worse (nonresponders). Univariable and multivariable logistic regression models assessed clinical characteristics and QoL outcomes. Results: A total of 956 patients were included (25% females, mean age 63.9). Most patients (≈80%) were super responders (n=761), 138 (14.4%) had mild/moderate improvement, and 57 (5.9%) were nonresponders. The strongest predictors of remarkable QoL improvement were freedom of arrhythmia recurrence (OR, 2.42 [95% CI, 1.27–4.59], P =0.007) and lower AF burden at 12 months. Similarly, higher AF burden was significantly associated with clinical nonresponse. In patients with observed clinical recurrence-QoL mismatch, changes in AF burden at 12 months were the main predictors of QoL outcome, with lower burden predicting higher improvement in QoL and vice versa. Conclusions: Most patients derive significant QoL benefit from AF ablation. Freedom from arrhythmia recurrence and lower AF burden predict remarkable QoL improvement following ablation.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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