Atrioesophageal Fistula Rates Before and After Adoption of Active Esophageal Cooling During Atrial Fibrillation Ablation

Javier Sánchez(Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia), Christopher Woods, Jason Zagrodzky(Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia), Jose Nazari(NorthShore University HealthSystem), Matthew J. Singleton(WellSpan Health), Amir Schricker(Mills Peninsula Health Services), A Ruppert(Sharp Memorial Hospital), Babette Brumback(University of Florida), Benjamin Jenny(Tri-City Medical Center), Charles A. Athill(San Diego Cardiac Center), Christopher Joseph(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Dipak Shah(Ascension), Gaurav A. Upadhyay(University of Chicago), Erik Kulstad(Southwestern Medical Center), John Cogan(Memorial Healthcare System), Jordan Leyton‐Mange(MaineHealth), Julie Cooper(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Kamala P. Tamirisa(Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia), Samuel Omotoye(Cleveland Clinic), Saroj Timilsina(Memorial Healthcare System), Alejandro Perez‐Verdia(Saint Luke's Hospital), Andrew Kaplan(Arizona Heart Institute), Apoor Patel(Methodist Hospital), Alex Ro(NorthShore University HealthSystem), Andrew Corsello(MaineHealth), Arun Kolli(Tri-City Medical Center), Brian Greet(Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia), Danya Willms(Sharp Memorial Hospital), David Burkland(Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia), Demetrio Castillo(Memorial Healthcare System), Firas Zahwe(Ascension), Hemal M. Nayak(The University of Texas at San Antonio), James Daniels(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), John F. MacGregor(Memorial Healthcare System), Matthew C. Sackett(WellSpan Health), W. Michael Kutayli(Bryan Health), Michel Barakat(PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center), Robert Percell(Bryan Health), Spyridon Akrivakis(Eastern Maine Medical Center), Steven C. Hao, Taylor Liu(Kaiser Permanente), Ambrose Panico(Middle East Studies Association of North America), Archana Ramireddy(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Thomas A. Dewland(St. Franziskus Hospital), Edward P. Gerstenfeld(St. Franziskus Hospital), Daniel Benhayon Lanes(Memorial Healthcare System), Edward Sze(MaineHealth), Gregory Francisco(Sharp Memorial Hospital), José Sandro Pereira da Silva(Centra Health), Julia McHugh(Centra Health), Kai Sung(Tri-City Medical Center), León A. Feldman(Eisenhower Medical Center), Nicholas Serafini(Advocate Heart Institute), Raymond Kawasaki(Northwest Community Hospital), Richard Hongo(California Pacific Medical Center), Richard Kuk(Centra Health), Robert Hayward(Kaiser Permanente), Shirley Park(Kaiser Permanente), Andrew Vu(Kaiser Permanente), Christopher D. Henry(Northwest Community Hospital), Shane Bailey(MedStar Heart & Vascular Institute), Steven Mickelsen(Scripps Health), Taresh Taneja(Kaiser Permanente), Westby G. Fisher(NorthShore University HealthSystem), Mark D. Metzl(NorthShore University HealthSystem)
JACC. Clinical electrophysiology
September 20, 2023
Cited by 41Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Active esophageal cooling reduces the incidence of endoscopically identified severe esophageal lesions during radiofrequency (RF) catheter ablation of the left atrium for the treatment of atrial fibrillation. A formal analysis of the atrioesophageal fistula (AEF) rate with active esophageal cooling has not previously been performed. OBJECTIVES: The authors aimed to compare AEF rates before and after the adoption of active esophageal cooling. METHODS: This institutional review board (IRB)-approved study was a prospective analysis of retrospective data, designed before collecting and analyzing the real-world data. The number of AEFs occurring in equivalent time frames before and after adoption of cooling using a dedicated esophageal cooling device (ensoETM, Attune Medical) were quantified across 25 prespecified hospital systems. AEF rates were then compared using generalized estimating equations robust to cluster correlation. RESULTS: A total of 14,224 patients received active esophageal cooling during RF ablation across the 25 hospital systems, which included a total of 30 separate hospitals. In the time frames before adoption of active cooling, a total of 10,962 patients received primarily luminal esophageal temperature (LET) monitoring during their RF ablations. In the preadoption cohort, a total of 16 AEFs occurred, for an AEF rate of 0.146%, in line with other published estimates for procedures using LET monitoring. In the postadoption cohort, no AEFs were found in the prespecified sites, yielding an AEF rate of 0% (P < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Adoption of active esophageal cooling during RF ablation of the left atrium for the treatment of atrial fibrillation was associated with a significant reduction in AEF rate.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis