Conference Coverage

A-Fib Ablation Shown Safe During Cardiac Surgery

View on the News

Results Provide Reassurance on Safety

When Dr. James L. Cox introduced the Cox-Maze III procedure for the surgical disruption of atrial fibrillation, the technique involved prolonged cutting and sewing, and the added time on cardiopulmonary bypass and cross-clamping this produced led to a lot of morbidity, including neurologic complications and renal failure.

The current study used a modified Maze procedure that primarily used cryoablation. Because no cutting and sewing were involved, the surgery was much easier, and it produced fewer complications. Surgeons are interested in an atrial fibrillation procedure that is safe and increases the likelihood of leading to sinus rhythm.

Mitchel L. Zoler/IMNG Medical Media


Dr. Miguel Sousa Uva

This study is important because it shows that this method can be used safely and it improves the end point of resting sinus rhythm. It is paradoxical that the main rhythm benefit was in patients with long-standing persistent atrial fibrillation, because usually that is harder to treat. But this may have been a methodological issue, because they measured the 1-year rhythm outcome without doing prolonged, continuous ECG monitoring. It’s hard to define success in patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation unless you monitor patients continuously for a week.

The main message from this study was that the ablation procedure was safe during cardiac surgery and did not add much time or complexity to the surgery. I think these results will increase the use of ablation during cardiac surgery for other reasons. It is a major contribution.

Miguel Sousa Uva, M.D., a cardiac surgeon at Hospital da Cruz Vermelha in Lisbon, made these comments in an interview. He said that he had no disclosures.


 

AT THE ANNUAL CONGRESS OF THE EUROPEAN SOCIETY OF CARDIOLOGY

Concurrent with the presentation of PRAGUE-12, the results also appeared in an article published online (Eur. Heart J. 2012;33 [doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehs290]).

Dr. Widimsky and his associates said that they had no disclosures.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Forgoing Defibrillation Testing at ICD Insertion Found to Be Safe
MDedge Cardiology
One-Fourth of Doctors Not Taking New Medicare Patients
MDedge Cardiology
Watchman LAA Closure Device Trial Underway
MDedge Cardiology
Stroke Prevention in AF: Study Finds Some Differences Among New OACs
MDedge Cardiology
Rethinking Resynchronization: Why Women Fare Better Than Men
MDedge Cardiology
FDA Recommends X-Ray for ICD Patients With Riata Leads
MDedge Cardiology
Third Universal MI Definition Unveiled
MDedge Cardiology
Putting ECGs to the Test
MDedge Cardiology
No Benefit of Balloon Pump in Acute MI With Shock
MDedge Cardiology
Auscultation Rules!
MDedge Cardiology