A worldwide survey on incidence, management and prognosis of oesophageal fistula formation following atrial fibrillation catheter ablation: The POTTER-AF study.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
37062040
Description
AIMS
Oesophageal fistula represents a rare but dreadful complication of atrial fibrillation catheter ablation. Data on its incidence, management and outcome are sparse.
METHODS AND RESULTS
This international multicenter registry investigates the characteristics of oesophageal fistulae after treatment of atrial fibrillation by catheter ablation. A total of 553,729 catheter ablation procedures (radiofrequency: 62.9%, cryoballoon: 36.2%, other modalities: 0.9%) were performed at 214 centers in 35 countries. In 78 centers 138 patients (0.025%, radiofrequency: 0.038%, cryoballoon: 0.0015% (p<0.0001)) were diagnosed with an oesophageal fistula. Periprocedural data were available for 118 patients (85.5%). Following catheter ablation, the median time to symptoms and the median time to diagnosis were 18 (7.75, 25; range: 0-60) days and 21 (15, 29.5; range: 2-63) days, respectively. The median time from symptom onset to oesophageal fistula diagnosis was 3 (1, 9; range: 0-42) days. The most common initial symptom was fever (59.3%). The diagnosis was established by chest computed tomography in 80.2% of patients. Oesophageal surgery was performed in 47.4% and direct endoscopic treatment in 19.8%, and conservative treatment in 32.8% of patients. The overall mortality was 65.8%. Mortality following surgical (51.9%) or endoscopic treatment (56.5%) was significantly lower as compared to conservative management (89.5%) (odds ratio 7.463 (2.414, 23.072) p<0.001).
CONCLUSIONS
Oesophageal fistula after catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation is rare and occurs mostly with the use of radiofrequency energy rather than cryoenergy. Mortality without surgical or endoscopic intervention is exceedingly high.
Oesophageal fistula represents a rare but dreadful complication of atrial fibrillation catheter ablation. Data on its incidence, management and outcome are sparse.
METHODS AND RESULTS
This international multicenter registry investigates the characteristics of oesophageal fistulae after treatment of atrial fibrillation by catheter ablation. A total of 553,729 catheter ablation procedures (radiofrequency: 62.9%, cryoballoon: 36.2%, other modalities: 0.9%) were performed at 214 centers in 35 countries. In 78 centers 138 patients (0.025%, radiofrequency: 0.038%, cryoballoon: 0.0015% (p<0.0001)) were diagnosed with an oesophageal fistula. Periprocedural data were available for 118 patients (85.5%). Following catheter ablation, the median time to symptoms and the median time to diagnosis were 18 (7.75, 25; range: 0-60) days and 21 (15, 29.5; range: 2-63) days, respectively. The median time from symptom onset to oesophageal fistula diagnosis was 3 (1, 9; range: 0-42) days. The most common initial symptom was fever (59.3%). The diagnosis was established by chest computed tomography in 80.2% of patients. Oesophageal surgery was performed in 47.4% and direct endoscopic treatment in 19.8%, and conservative treatment in 32.8% of patients. The overall mortality was 65.8%. Mortality following surgical (51.9%) or endoscopic treatment (56.5%) was significantly lower as compared to conservative management (89.5%) (odds ratio 7.463 (2.414, 23.072) p<0.001).
CONCLUSIONS
Oesophageal fistula after catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation is rare and occurs mostly with the use of radiofrequency energy rather than cryoenergy. Mortality without surgical or endoscopic intervention is exceedingly high.
Date of Publication
2023-07-14
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
Atrial fibrillation catheter ablation oesophageal fistula radiofrequency energy
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Tilz, Roland Richard | |
Schmidt, Vanessa | |
Pürerfellner, Helmut | |
Maury, Philippe | |
Chun, Kr Julian | |
Martinek, Martin | |
Sohns, Christian | |
Schmidt, Boris | |
Mandel, Franck | |
Gandjbakhch, Estelle | |
Laredo, Mikael | |
Gunawardene, Melanie Anuscha | |
Willems, Stephan | |
Beiert, Thomas | |
Borlich, Martin | |
Iden, Leon | |
Füting, Anna | |
Spittler, Raphael | |
Gaspar, Thomas | |
Richter, Sergio | |
Schade, Anja | |
Kuniss, Malte | |
Neumann, Thomas | |
Francke, Alexander | |
Wunderlich, Carsten | |
Shin, Dong-In | |
Grosse Meininghaus, Dirk | |
Foresti, Mike | |
Bonsels, Marc | |
Reek, David | |
Wiegand, Uwe | |
Bauer, Alexander | |
Metzner, Andreas | |
Eckardt, Lars | |
Popescu, Sorin Ștefan | |
Krahnefeld, Olaf | |
Sticherling, Christian | |
Kühne, Michael | |
Nguyen, Dinh Quang | |
Saguner, Ardan M | |
Linz, Dominik | |
van der Voort, Pepijn | |
Mulder, Bart A | |
Vijgen, Johan | |
Almorad, Alexandre | |
Guenancia, Charles | |
Fauchier, Laurent | |
Boveda, Serge | |
De Greef, Y | |
Da Costa, Antoine | |
Jais, Pierre | |
Derval, Nicolas | |
Milhem, Antoine | |
Jesel, Laurence | |
Garcia, Rodrigue | |
Poty, Hervé | |
Khoueiry, Ziad | |
Seitz, Julien | |
Laborderie, Julien | |
Mechulan, Alexis | |
Brigadeau, Francois | |
Zhao, Alexandre | |
Saludas, Yannick | |
Piot, Olivier | |
Ahluwalia, Nikhil | |
Martin, Claire | |
Chen, Jian | |
Antolic, Bor | |
Leventopoulos, Georgios | |
Özcan, Emin Evren | |
Yorgun, Hikmet | |
Cay, Serkan | |
Yalin, Kivanc | |
Botros, Maichel Sobhy | |
Mahmoud, Ahmed Taher | |
Jędrzejczyk-Patej, Ewa | |
Inaba, Osamu | |
Okumura, Ken | |
Ejima, Koichiro | |
Khakpour, Houman | |
Boyle, Noel | |
Catanzaro, J N | |
Reddy, Vivek | |
Mohanty, Sanghamitra | |
Natale, Andrea | |
Blessberger, Hermann | |
Yang, Bing | |
Stevens, Irene | |
Sommer, Philipp | |
Veltmann, Christian | |
Steven, Daniel | |
Vogler, Julia | |
Kuck, Karl-Heinz | |
Merino, José Luis | |
Keelani, Ahmad | |
Heeger, Christian-H |
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik für Kardiologie
Series
European heart journal
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISSN
1522-9645
Access(Rights)
open.access