Multi-national survey on the methods, efficacy, and safety on the post-approval clinical use of pulsed field ablation (MANIFEST-PF).
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
September 1, 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Ekanem, Emmanuel | |
Reddy, Vivek Y | |
Schmidt, Boris | |
Neven, Kars | |
Metzner, Andreas | |
Hansen, Jim | |
Blaauw, Yuri | |
Maury, Philippe | |
Arentz, Thomas | |
Sommer, Philipp | |
Anic, Ante | |
Anselme, Frederic | |
Boveda, Serge | |
Deneke, Tom | |
Willems, Stephan | |
van der Voort, Pepijn | |
Tilz, Roland | |
Funasako, Moritoshi | |
Scherr, Daniel | |
Wakili, Reza | |
Steven, Daniel | |
Kautzner, Josef | |
Vijgen, Johan | |
Jais, Pierre | |
Petru, Jan | |
Chun, Julian | |
Füting, Anna | |
Rillig, Andreas | |
Mulder, Bart A | |
Johannessen, Arne | |
Rollin, Anne | |
Lehrmann, Heiko | |
Sohns, Christian | |
Jurisic, Zrinka | |
Savoure, Arnaud | |
Combes, Stephanes | |
Nentwich, Karin | |
Gunawardene, Melanie | |
Ouss, Alexandre | |
Kirstein, Bettina | |
Manninger, Martin | |
Bohnen, Jan-Eric | |
Sultan, Arian | |
Peichl, Petr | |
Koopman, Pieter | |
Derval, Nicolas | |
Turagam, Mohit K | |
Neuzil, Petr |
Subject(s)
Series
Europace
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1099-5129
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
35647644
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
AIMS
Pulsed field ablation (PFA) is a novel atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation modality that has demonstrated preferential tissue ablation, including no oesophageal damage, in first-in-human clinical trials. In the MANIFEST-PF survey, we investigated the 'real world' performance of the only approved PFA catheter, including acute effectiveness and safety-in particular, rare oesophageal effects and other unforeseen PFA-related complications.
METHODS AND RESULTS
This retrospective survey included all 24 clinical centres using the pentaspline PFA catheter after regulatory approval. Institution-level data were obtained on patient characteristics, procedure parameters, acute efficacy, and adverse events. With an average of 73 patients treated per centre (range 7-291), full cohort included 1758 patients: mean age 61.6 years (range 19-92), female 34%, first-time ablation 94%, paroxysmal/persistent AF 58/35%. Most procedures employed deep sedation without intubation (82.1%), and 15.1% were discharged same day. Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) was successful in 99.9% (range 98.9-100%). Procedure time was 65 min (38-215). There were no oesophageal complications or phrenic nerve injuries persisting past hospital discharge. Major complications (1.6%) were pericardial tamponade (0.97%) and stroke (0.4%); one stroke resulted in death (0.06%). Minor complications (3.9%) were primarily vascular (3.3%), but also included transient phrenic nerve paresis (0.46%), and TIA (0.11%). Rare complications included coronary artery spasm, haemoptysis, and dry cough persistent for 6 weeks (0.06% each).
CONCLUSION
In a large cohort of unselected patients, PFA was efficacious for PVI, and expressed a safety profile consistent with preferential tissue ablation. However, the frequency of 'generic' catheter complications (tamponade, stroke) underscores the need for improvement.
Pulsed field ablation (PFA) is a novel atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation modality that has demonstrated preferential tissue ablation, including no oesophageal damage, in first-in-human clinical trials. In the MANIFEST-PF survey, we investigated the 'real world' performance of the only approved PFA catheter, including acute effectiveness and safety-in particular, rare oesophageal effects and other unforeseen PFA-related complications.
METHODS AND RESULTS
This retrospective survey included all 24 clinical centres using the pentaspline PFA catheter after regulatory approval. Institution-level data were obtained on patient characteristics, procedure parameters, acute efficacy, and adverse events. With an average of 73 patients treated per centre (range 7-291), full cohort included 1758 patients: mean age 61.6 years (range 19-92), female 34%, first-time ablation 94%, paroxysmal/persistent AF 58/35%. Most procedures employed deep sedation without intubation (82.1%), and 15.1% were discharged same day. Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) was successful in 99.9% (range 98.9-100%). Procedure time was 65 min (38-215). There were no oesophageal complications or phrenic nerve injuries persisting past hospital discharge. Major complications (1.6%) were pericardial tamponade (0.97%) and stroke (0.4%); one stroke resulted in death (0.06%). Minor complications (3.9%) were primarily vascular (3.3%), but also included transient phrenic nerve paresis (0.46%), and TIA (0.11%). Rare complications included coronary artery spasm, haemoptysis, and dry cough persistent for 6 weeks (0.06% each).
CONCLUSION
In a large cohort of unselected patients, PFA was efficacious for PVI, and expressed a safety profile consistent with preferential tissue ablation. However, the frequency of 'generic' catheter complications (tamponade, stroke) underscores the need for improvement.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| euac050.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.07 MB | Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) | published |