eComment. Hybrid treatment of lone-standing atrial fibrillation

Interactive CardioVascular and Thoracic Surgery, Apr 2012

We read with interest the article by La Meir and colleagues about minimally invasive thoracoscopic hybrid treatment of lone atrial fibrillation, via the us

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eComment. Hybrid treatment of lone-standing atrial fibrillation

Conflict of Interest: None declared References [1] La Meir M, Gelsomino S, Luca F, Lorusso R, Gensini GF, Pison L, Wellens F, Maessen J. Minimally invasive thoracoscopic hybrid treatment of lone atrial fibrillation: early results of monopolar versus bipolar radiofrequency source. Interact CardioVasc Thorac Surg 2012;14:445–51. [2] Cox JL, Schuessler RB, D’Agostino HJ jr, Stone CA, Chang B-C, Cain ME, Corr PB, Boineau JP. The surgical treatment of atrial fibrillation. III. The development of a definitive surgical procedure. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1991;101:569–583. [3] Stulak JM, Dearani JA, Sundt TM 3rd, Daly RC, Schaff HV. Ablation of atrial fibrillation: comparison of catheter-based techniques and the Cox-Maze III operation. Ann Thorac Surg 2011;91:1882–1888. [4] Von Oppell UO, Masani N, O’Callaghan P, Wheeler R, Dimitrakakis G, Schiffelers S. Mitral valve surgery plus concomitant atrial fibrillation ablation is superior to mitral valve surgery alone with an intensive rhythm control strategy. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2009;35:641–650. [5] Prasad SMjr, Maniar HS, Camillo CJ, Schuessler RB, Boineau JP, Sundt TM 3rd, Cox JL, Damiano RJ jr. The Cox maze III procedure for atrial fibrillation: long-term efficacy in patients undergoing lone versus concomitant procedures. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2003;126:1822–1828 better outcome compared to a unipolar device, especially in patients with persistent and long-standing persistent AF. Although the study deals with a topic of vivid interest and controversial debate, the article has several major limitations. First, the authors claim that the described approach is a hybrid technique. However, the paper does not define any true hybrid approach, merging surgical and electrophysiological (EP) techniques as previously proposed by several other groups, including ours [2]. In fact, no systematic protocol was described and from the paper it is possible only to infer that patients underwent a surgical ablation and a concomitant EP evaluation which was targeted at addressing potential gaps or additional right-sided lesions (IVC, SVC, intercaval). However, those right-sided lesions were almost exclusively delivered in the group undergoing bipolar RF ablation and patients with persistent and long-standing AF could have robust benefits from such additional ablations on the right atrium. Of note, it is important to stress that there was a major difference, almost significant (p = 0.054), among the two groups with respect to the presence of paroxysmal AF preoperatively (unipolar RF= 26.3% vs bipolar RF = 45.7%). Ablation for paroxysmal AF is obviously associated with a significantly better outcome regardless of the type of lesion set and energy source. This bias is even more significant given the small sample size (unipolar = 19 vs bipolar = 35) which are further divided into even smaller subgroups (paroxysmal, persistent, long-standing persistent). Furthermore, the authors evidenced the need for endocardial touch-up due to gaps, in particular following unipolar RF ablation (with the site of such gaps not being disclosed). Nevertheless, they report (as outlined in the Discussion section) a device setting of 60°C and 120 s which is clearly not the recommended one. In fact, the proper settings of the monopolar device used in the study should be 75°C and 120 s with at least a double application per segment (the device has 2 segments, proximal and distal) which means that ablations must be delivered at least 4 times, and not 2.8 as reported by the authors themselves. This implies that the monopolar device may have been used improperly in terms of inadequacy of either temperature or number of applications, therefore leading to absence of conduction block in the whole series of patients undergoing ablation with the monopolar device. Moreover, the timing between the surgical and electrophysiological procedures is a matter of utmost importance. In fact, simultaneous surgical/EP procedures may be associated with false negative results (such as acute demonstration of a bidirectional block which could be only transient and not potentially confirmed in the chronic setting), as well as with false positive results in terms of early inducible arrhythmias, which usually require further “maturation” of the ablative lesions [3]. It is also debatable whether the excision of the left atrial appendage (which occurred once again exclusively in the group undergoing bipolar RF ablation) could have contributed to a significant volume reduction or potentially to different rhythm outcome as well. In conclusion, besides specific technical issues, such as incorrect device settings for the monopolar device or an extensive lesion set with right-sided lesions only in the bipolar group, the current study deals with a limited number of patients, therefore leading to consistent statistical quirks which can severely jeopardize the reliability and the interpretation of the results. Further studies, enrolling larger and comparable populations receiving similar left and right atrial lesion sets, are warranted in order to further elucidate the real impact of different types of energy sources in the clinical outcome of patients undergoing minimally invasive AF surgical ablation. Conflict of Interest: Claudio Muneretto and Gianluigi Bisleri disclose a financial interest with Estech. eComment. Hybrid treatment of lone-standing atrial fibrillation Authors: Gianluigi Bisleri and Claudio Muneretto Division of Cardiac Surgery, University of Brescia Medical School, Brescia, Italy doi:10.1093/icvts/ivs091 © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. All rights reserved. We read with interest the article by La Meir and colleagues about minimally invasive thoracoscopic hybrid treatment of lone atrial fibrillation, via the use of either a monopolar or bipolar radiofrequency device [1]. Following their early institutional experience, they conclude that the use of a bipolar device is associated with a References [1] La Meir M, Gelsomino S, Luca F, Lorusso R, Gensini GF, Pisond L, Wellens F, Maessen J. Minimally invasive thoracoscopic hybrid treatment of lone atrial fibrillation: early results of monopolar versus bipolar radiofrequency source. Interact CardioVasc Thorac Surg 2012;14:445–51. [2] Bisleri G, Curnis A, Bottio T, Mascioli G, Muneretto C. The need of a hybrid approach for the treatment of atrial fibrillation. Heart Surg Forum 2005;8: E326–30. [3] Magnano AR, Argenziano M, Dizon JM, Vigilance D, Williams M, Yegen H, Rueter K, Oz M, Garan H. Mechanisms of atrial tachyarrhythmias following surgical atrial fibrillation ablation. J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol 2006;17:366–73. (Coolrail; Atricure) used for the inferior and roof lines. One can therefore conclude that a bipolar bidirectional clamping RF device is a superior tool. The inability to have guaranteed transmural continuous RF ablation lines is not only a surgical epicardial abl (...truncated)


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Bisleri, Gianluigi, Muneretto, Claudio. eComment. Hybrid treatment of lone-standing atrial fibrillation, Interactive CardioVascular and Thoracic Surgery, 2012, pp. 451, Volume 14, Issue 4, DOI: 10.1093/icvts/ivs091