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Prospective observational single center trial, evaluating the safety, radiation exposure and efficacy of remote magnetic catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation in daily routine.
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Background: Since the first description in 1998 catheter-interventional ablation (CA) has evolved to a standard treatment for symptomatic drug-refractory atrial fibrillation (AF).
Ablation efficacy but also complication percentage and radiation exposure are influenced by several factors, among them patient age, body weight, type and duration of AF, underling cardiac disease as well as the used ablation method, technology and the experience of the operator.
The objectives of developing a system for remote magnetic catheter navigation (RMN) were to improve the efficacy and safety of complex ablation procedures and to reduce radiation exposure. However, convincing data supporting this theory are still lacking.
Aim: To evaluate efficacy, safety profile / complication rate and radiation exposure in serial ablation procedures for paroxysmal and persistent AF as well as repeat interventions based on remote magnetic navigation and 3-D image integration with assessment of the learning curve for this complex technology.
Design: single center observational registry, analytical questioning, non-randomized, non-controlled, not blinded, consecutive patient inclusion
Study population:
Inclusion criteria: Consecutive patients with class I or class IIa indication for CA for symptomatic atrial fibrillation according to the current guidelines.
Exclusion criteria:
Endpoints Primary endpoint
Safety:
Secondary endpoints Efficacy
Radiation exposure:
Safety:
Subgroups:
Randomisation: none
Study procedure:
Pre-ablation: screening of all patients, referred for catheter ablation for AF. Inclusion after given informed consent. Oral anticoagulation (OAC) for at least 3 weeks. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) in all patients.
Ablation: Non-interrupted OAC, non-vitamin-K antagonist treatment withheld only the morning before ablation. All patients undergo PVAI and mapping for fibrotic areas, additional substrate modification on decision of the operator.
Techniques and technologies used: RMN: Niobe/Epoch®, Navigant™, 0.1 Tesla, Stereotaxis Inc.; fluoroscopy system: Siemens AXIOM-Artis VC12B, 6-1 fps; non-fluoroscopic mapping (NFM): Carto-RMT, magnetic resonance-image-integration, (Biosense-Webster Inc.); TEE-guided single transseptal puncture, "Single catheter ablation" technique: Navistar-RMT Thermocool (Biosense-Webster Inc.), target temperature 48°C, power limit 40Watts (posterior left atrial wall) up to 50W, irrigation infusion rate 17 mL/min; Heparin for maintaining an activated clotting time between 300 to 400 sec. Endpoint: bidirectional PV-block.
Post-ablation in hospital: OAC continued immediately following sheath removal after ablation for a minimum of 2 months, thereafter according to embolic risk (CHA2DS2-VASc-risk evaluation). 48 hours telemonitoring, echocardiography.
Follow up: blanking period 3 months. Clinical evaluation after 3, 6 and 12 months including echocardiography and 72-hours Holter.
Unscheduled visits for complications and symptoms suggesting recurrent tachyarrhythmia.
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804 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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