학술논문

Safety and Efficacy of Uninterrupted Oral Anticoagulation in Patients Undergoing Catheter Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation with Different Techniques
Document Type
Report
Source
Journal of Clinical Medicine. October 2023, Vol. 12 Issue 20
Subject
Italy
Language
English
ISSN
2077-0383
Abstract
Author(s): Marco Schiavone (corresponding author) [1,2,3,*]; Alessio Gasperetti (corresponding author) [1,3,4,*]; Annalisa Filtz [1]; Gaia Vantaggiato [1]; Cecilia Gobbi [5]; Claudio Tondo [2,6]; Giovanni Battista Forleo [1] 1. Introduction Catheter [...]
Background. The safety and efficacy of an uninterrupted direct anticoagulation (DOAC) strategy during catheter ablation (CA) for atrial fibrillation (AF) has not been fully investigated with different ablation techniques. Methods. We evaluated consecutive AF patients undergoing catheter ablation with three different techniques. All patients were managed with an uninterrupted DOAC strategy. The primary endpoint was the rate of periprocedural thromboembolic and bleeding events. The secondary endpoints of the study were the rate of MACE and bleeding events at one-year follow-up. Results. In total, 162 patients were enrolled. Overall, 53 were female and the median age was 60 [55.5–69.5] years. The median CHA[sub.2] DS[sub.2] -VASc and HAS-BLED scores were 2 [1–4] and 2 [1–2], respectively. In total, 16 patients had a past stroke or TIA while 11 had a predisposition or a history of bleeding. The CA procedure was performed with different techniques: RF 43%, cryoballoon 37%, or laser–balloon 20%. Overall, 35.8% were on rivaroxaban, 20.4% were on edoxaban, 6.8% were on apixaban, and 3.7% were on dabigatran. All other patients were all naïve to DOACs; the first anticoagulant dose was given before the ablation procedure. As for periprocedural complications, we found three groin hematomas not requiring interventions, one ischemic stroke, and one systemic air embolism (the last two likely due to several catheter changes through the transeptal sheath). Five patients reached the secondary endpoints: one patient for a myocardial infarction while four patients experienced minor bleeding during 1-year follow-up. Conclusions. Our results corroborate the safety and the efficacy of uninterrupted DOAC strategy in patients undergoing CA for AF, regardless of the ablation technique.