Circulation Reports
Online ISSN : 2434-0790

This article has now been updated. Please use the final version.

Chronic Effect of HotBalloon-Based Wide Planar Ablation on Epicardial Adipose Tissue in Persistent Atrial Fibrillation
Shiro Nakahara Yuichi HoriReiko FukudaHirotsugu SatoHideyuki AokiTetsuya IshikawaYuji ItabashiSayuki KobayashiIsao TaguchiYasuo Okumura
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Article ID: CR-23-0073

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Abstract

Background: Adverse atrial remodeling, including epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) deposition in the left atrium (LA), is implicated in atrial fibrillation (AF). Radiofrequency hotballoon (RHB) ablation can produce wide planar lesions because the balloon is highly compliant; however, chronic effects of RHB ablation on structural remodeling remain unknown. This clinical-experimental investigation characterized chronic effects of RHB ablation on EAT in persistent AF (PsAF).

Methods and Results: The clinical study involved 91 patients (obese, n=30; non-obese, n=61) undergoing RHB ablation for PsAF. LA-EAT was assessed from computed tomography images obtained before ablation and 6 months later. Tissue effects of RHB ablation were explored in a chronic swine model. RHB ablation significantly reduced LA volume (mean [±SD] 177.7±29.7 vs. 138.4±29.6 mL; P<0.001) and LA-EAT volume (median [interquartile range] 22.0 [12.4–33.3] vs. 16.5 [7.9–25.8] mL; P<0.001). The reduction in EAT was significantly greater in the pulmonary vein (PV) antrum than in other LA regions (37.9% vs. 15.8%; P<0.001). The percentage reduction in PV antrum EAT was equivalent between obese and non-obese patients, as was the postablation success rate (73% vs. 70%; P=0.77). RHB ablation produced transmural lesions reaching the pigs’ epicardial fat region.

Conclusions: RHB-based planar-transmural lesions altered the structurally remodeled LA, including EAT. Further studies are needed to determine whether factors other than PV isolation contribute to the clinical success of RHB ablation.

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