Left atrial strain significance in prediction of early atrial fibrillation recurrence after cardioversion and ablation
Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: None. Introduction The fibrosis of the LA, which is characteristic of AF, causes mechanical dysfunction of the LA and may also be present in patients without LA enlargement. LA strain represents a surrogate marker of this mechanical dysfunction. Early detection of LA dysfunction may be crucial in identifying patients who are more likely to experience AF recurrence following cardioversion and ablation. Before cardioversion and ablation, the probability of AF recurrence might be predicted, which could lead to better patient selection, an individualized therapeutic strategy with reduced risk and focused follow-up. Purpose The aim of this study was to evaluate the additional predictive value of LA function assessed by using strain echocardiography for early AF recurrence after cardioversion and ablation. Methods 94 patients diagnosed with symptomatic persistent atrial fibrillation (EHRA symptom score ≥3 (mean age 59.4 ± 12.2 years, 58% male, 42%female), preserved LV ejection fraction were prospectively analyzed. In 39 (41,5%) patients pharmacological cardioversion was done after saturation with antiarhythmic drugs,in 27 (28,7%) patients planed electrical cardioversion was done after medical saturation with antiarrhythmic drugs and failure of pharmacological cardioversion, and in 28 (29,8%) patients planed RF ablation was performed. Complete echocardiography evaluation including strain and volume index LA was performed before cardioversion and ablation. The rhythm evaluation was done in the first month after cardioversion and RF ablation (35±5 days). The primary endpoint was persistent AF recurrence. Results 29 (30,8%) patients had AF recurrence in the overall study population, independently of duration of AF or method of rhythm control. Peak atrial longitudinal strain (PALS) ≤15% had the highest incremental predictive value for AF recurrence (HR =8.42, 95% CI: 3.17–25.12, p < 0.001). In patients with non-dilated LA, PALS≤15% remained an independent predictor of AF recurrence (HR = 5.32, 95% CI: 1.77–17.42, p = 0.005). Conclusion This study shown that, in addition to LA dilatation, LA function as determined by PALS can provide a prognostic value for early AF recurrence after cardioversion or ablation. PALS also predicted AF recurrence in patients with nondilated LA. These findings highlight the additional prognostic usefulness of LA strain and recommend its implementation in the systematic assessment of AF patients prior to the choice of rhythm/rate control.