Catheter ablation in rate-controlled atrial fibrillation with severely reduced ejection fraction: intervention for irregularity-mediated cardiomyopathy

Background

Recent evidence suggests atrial fibrillation (AF) causes cardiomyopathy due to remodeling driven by both irregular rate and rhythm. Atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation in patients with reduced ejection fraction (EF) ≤ 35% has been shown to improve EF and mortality. It is unknown whether the benefits of AF ablation among patients with reduced EF are affected by the degree of pre-ablation rate control.

Objectives

To evaluate AF ablation echocardiographic outcomes for patients who have EF ≤ 35% with varying degrees of pre-ablation rate control.

Methods

Single-center, retrospective study of patients with EF ≤ 35% undergoing first-time ablation of persistent AF. Primary analyses evaluated the degree to which pre-ablation rate control impacted echocardiographic outcomes. Rates of EF recovery to > 35% were compared at three different cutoffs: 110 bpm, 90 bpm, and 70 bpm. A linear regression analysis was then performed to evaluate whether baseline heart rate (HR) predicted change in EF.

Results

Among 73 patients, the mean pre-ablation resting HR was 90 ± 25 bpm, and baseline EF was 27 ± 7%. Patients experienced significant improvements in EF by mean + 14% ± 11% (p < 0.001). Post-ablation EF recovery occurred in 60% of patients. No differences in EF improvement were detected at HR control targets of ≤ 110 bpm or ≤ 90 bpm, while patients achieving HR ≤ 70 bpm had less improvement in EF (+ 9% ± 9%) compared to those with HR above the cutoff (+ 16% ± 11%; p = 0.01). Linear regression analysis did not reveal baseline HR as a significant predictor of change in LVEF (slope = 0.09, r2 = 0.05, p = 0.07).

Conclusions

Catheter ablation of persistent AF in patients with reduced EF frequently resulted in recovery in EF > 35%, irrespective of pre-ablation achieved rate control. While patients with HR > 70 bpm experienced a greater improvement in EF compared to those ≤ 70 bpm, patients with baseline HR below this target still experienced significant EF improvements. Further investigation into irregularity-mediated cardiomyopathy is warranted.

Graphical abstract

Comments (0)

No login
gif