Analysis: Pulsed Field Afib Ablation Superior to Thermal Methods (2024)

— Also, what real-world data are showing about new workflow patterns and PFA use in heart failure

by Crystal Phend , Contributing Editor, MedPage Today May 21, 2024

BOSTON -- Pulsed field ablation (PFA) trials continued to accrue positive data, as reported at the Heart Rhythm Society (HRS) annual meeting.

Superiority, Finally

Secondary analysis of the pivotal ADVENT trial showed that PFA with the Farawave device was actually superior in one respect to conventional thermal ablation for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (Afib) in that first randomized head-to-head trial.

While the main trial had shown noninferiority for efficacy at 1 year in freedom from atrial arrhythmias, post hoc analysis of the atrial arrhythmia burden calculated from transtelephonic ECG and Holter monitoring showed more patients achieved less than 0.1% residual burden with PFA than with thermal ablation (82% vs 75%, OR 1.5, P=0.04).

That amount of burden would be the equivalent of 8.6 minutes of atrial arrhythmia across two 72-hour Holter monitoring periods, or about 1.4 minutes of arrhythmia per day, said presenter Vivek Reddy, MD, of the Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. The findings were also published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

"Historically and in ADVENT, the binary endpoint of 30 seconds of arrhythmia has been used to define success or failure. And this is an arbitrary endpoint, which I think most people agree doesn't have significant clinical significance," he said.

Pooling the data across the two treatment groups, an atrial arrhythmia burden of more than 0.1% was associated with lower quality of life scores and higher likelihood of redo ablation, cardioversion and hospitalization -- supporting its clinical relevance as an endpoint.

To calculate post-blanking period atrial arrhythmia burden without having implantable devices, the researchers divided the total amount of time the patients spent in atrial fibrillation by the total amount of time available on Holter monitoring and transtelephonic ECG monitoring. Quality of life assessments were performed at baseline and at 12 months.

However, atrial arrhythmia burden was developed based on continuous monitoring, cautioned session study discussant Michael Glikson, MD, of Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem. "The extrapolation from continuous to intermittent monitoring is imperfect, especially with partial compliance, as we've seen here."

Nevertheless, he concluded: "This is the first demonstration of pulsed field ablation advantage over thermal using atrial burden data. Atrial burden has been established as a better measure of ablation success than a single short episode of recurrence. Atrial burden should be the preferred monitoring endpoint in future studies."

Real-World Results

Lucas Boersma, MD, PhD, of St. Antonius Hospital in Nieuwegein, The Netherlands, reported on 30-day data from the FARADISE global registry of real-world use of the Farapulse pentaspline PFA catheter in 1,173 patients across Europe, Asia, Australia, and the Middle East. Afib was paroxysmal in 65% of cases.

Safety showed device or procedure related serious adverse events in 4.0%, most often minor vascular access complications (2.3%) followed by major vascular complications (0.9%). There were no reported deaths or instances of coronary spasm, persistent phrenic nerve palsy, atrioesophageal fistula, pulmonary vein stenosis, or esophageal lesions.

Hemolysis was uncommon (0.1%), but one case resulted in renal failure. All cases occurred in the top quartile of number of PFA applications and three of four occurred in persistent Afib patients. Immediate post-procedure fluid infusion might help prevent this complication, Boersma noted.

Follow-up for up to 3 years is planned.

HRS session study discussant Kevin Jackson, MD, of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, noted that these safety findings were "quite comparable" to what was expected from the pivotal study data.

While reassuring for safety, the surprises came from workflow findings, he noted. He pointed to the 59% of patients treated under general anesthesia versus 37% under deep sedation and 85% done without a mapping system. And, he added, fluoroscopy times are likely to go up with PFA, even after significant experience (11 min for pulmonary vein isolation [PVI], 16 min for PVI+ after more than 50 cases).

"This would be a major departure to how cases are done in some areas," Jackson noted.

Use in Heart Failure

While guidelines recommend catheter ablation as a primary approach for managing Afib only for heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), analysis of the MANIFEST-PF registry suggested benefits across the ejection fraction spectrum in heart failure (HF).

In the multicenter patient-level registry of consecutive patients undergoing PFA for paroxysmal or persistent Afib, 1-year freedom from atrial arrhythmia was significantly higher in patients without HF than in those with HF with preserved ejection fraction or HF with moderately reduced or reduced ejection fraction (no HF 79.9%, HFpEF 71.3%, and HFmrEF or HFrEF 67.5%, respectively, P<0.001). However, HFpEF patients didn't get significantly less benefit than the HFmrEF/HFrEF patients (P=0.26).

That was true in both paroxysmal and persistent Afib, reported Mohit Turagam, MD, of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. Major adverse event rates were likewise similar between groups in the findings, which were also published in JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology.

"I think the data is very clear. It's non-randomized, but it seems to be quite safe," added Reddy, who was a co-author. "But it doesn't really include patients who have very significant heart failure. So I think that is an important notation."

  • Analysis: Pulsed Field Afib Ablation Superior to Thermal Methods (1)

    Crystal Phend is a contributing editor at MedPage Today. Follow

Disclosures

Zimetbaum disclosed relationships with Farapulse and Abbott Medical.

FARADISE was sponsored by Boston Scientific. Boersma disclosed relationships with Boston Scientific, Adagio Medical, Medtronic, and Acutus Medical. His fees all go to the cardiology department at his institution.

Jackson disclosed relationships with Medtronic.

Glikson disclosed relationships with Boston Scientific and Medtronic.

Boston Scientific provided a grant to help fund data collection for MANIFEST-PF. Turagam reported relationships with Biosense Webster, Boston Scientific, AltaThera, Sanofi, and Medtronic.

Reddy reported receiving grants from Farapulse-Boston Scientific; serving as a consultant for and having equity in Ablacon, Acutus Medical, Affera-Medtronic, Apama Medical–Boston Scientific, Anumana, APN Health, Aquaheart, AtaCor, Autonomix, Axon Therapies, BackBeat, BioSig, CardiaCare, CardioNXT/AFTx, Circa Scientific, CoRISMA, Corvia Medical, Dinova-Hangzhou DiNovA EP Technology, East End Medical, EPD-Philips, EP Frontiers, Epix Therapeutics-Medtronic, EpiEP, Eximo, Field Medical, Focused Therapeutics, HRT, InterShunt, Javelin, Kardium, Keystone Heart, LuxMed, MedLumics, Middle Peak, Neutrace, Nuvera-Biosense Webster, Oracle Health, Restore Medical, Sirona Medical, SoundCath, and Valcare; serving as a consultant for AtriAN, Biosense-Webster, BioTel Heart, Biotronik, Cairdac, CardioFocus, Cardionomic, CoreMap, Fire1, Gore & Associates, Impulse Dynamics, Medtronic, Novartis, Philips, and Pulse Biosciences; and having equity in Manual Surgical Sciences, Newpace, Nyra Medical, Surecor, and Vizaramed.

Primary Source

JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology

Source Reference: Turagam MK, et al "Safety and effectiveness of pulsed field ablation for atrial fibrillation in patients with heart failure: A MANIFEST-PF sub-analysis" JACC Clin Electrophys 2024; DOI: 10.1016/j.jacep.2024.05.002.

Secondary Source

Journal of the American College of Cardiology

Source Reference: Reddy VY, et al "Pulsed field vs conventional thermal ablation for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: Recurrent atrial arrhythmia burden" J Am Coll Cardiol 2024; DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2024.05.001.

Additional Source

Heart Rhythm Society

Source Reference: Boersma L "Real world data collection in subjects treated with the FARAPULSE Pulsed Field Ablation system (FARADISE)" HRS 2024.

Analysis: Pulsed Field Afib Ablation Superior to Thermal Methods (2024)

FAQs

Analysis: Pulsed Field Afib Ablation Superior to Thermal Methods? ›

Conclusion. Compared to TA, PFA showed better results with regard to acute and long-term efficacy but significant differences in safety, with lower (peri)esophageal injury rates but higher tamponade rates in procedural data.

Is pulsed field ablation better? ›

Pulsed-field ablation is a very promising method of arrhythmia management due to its improved safety compared with thermal ablation,” Dr. Wazni says. “We expect there will be widespread adoption of this important new technology now that pulsed-field ablation systems are beginning to become commercially available.”

What is the recovery time for a pulsed field ablation? ›

3 months. By three months, the ablated tissue in your heart should heal completely. The British Heart Foundation also suggests that you should know by about 10 weeks whether the ablation was successful in halting your arrhythmia.

What are the side effects of a pulsed field ablation? ›

Valve damage, vascular and/or cardiac perforation is a risk with any intracardiac catheter. Catheter entrapment within the heart or blood vessels is a possible complication of cardiac ablation procedures.

Is pulsed field ablation available in the USA? ›

Currently, two pulsed field ablation systems have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The Medtronic PulseSelect Pulsed Field Ablation System received FDA approval in December 2023.

What is the success rate of pulse ablation? ›

Success rate of 99.9% in effectively isolating pulmonary veins (PVI). No long-term complications associated with the esophagus or phrenic nerve observed beyond the patient's hospital stay. PVI achieved in study subjects.

What type of ablation is best for atrial fibrillation? ›

Radiofrequency ablation

This is the most common type of cardiac ablation, using heat generated by high-frequency radio waves to treat arrhythmia. Radiofrequency (RF) ablation cauterizes (burns) the heart tissue involved in arrhythmias to block abnormal electrical activity, restoring a regular heartbeat.

What is the new treatment for atrial fibrillation in 2024? ›

Heart Rhythm 2024 Features Recent Developments and Future Directions in Pulsed Field Ablation. The Heart Rhythm Society (HRS) announced the findings of three new studies demonstrating the safety and efficacy of pulsed field ablation (PFA), a non-thermal ablation treatment for patients with atrial fibrillation (AF).

What is the newest procedure for AFib? ›

PFA technology uses electrical pulses to kill targeted cardiac muscle cells, creating scar tissue that blocks the faulty electrical signals that cause atrial fibrillation, an irregular—often rapid—heartbeat. The 4,000 volts of electricity used kill targeted heart cells but not other nearby cells.

Is pulsed field ablation FDA approved? ›

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the FARAPULSE Pulsed Field Ablation System for isolation of pulmonary veins in the treatment of drug-refractory, recurrent, symptomatic, paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AFib), according to a Boston Scientific press release.

Who is a candidate for pulsed field ablation? ›

The best candidates for pulsed field ablation are patients whose AFib is in the paroxysmal or early persistent states: Paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: A brief event of fibrillation that lasts less than a week. Persistent atrial fibrillation: When irregular heart rhythms last more than a week.

What is the most successful treatment for AFib? ›

Cardiac Catheter Ablation's Benefits and Impact on Patients

Catheter ablation is highly effective at managing the burdensome physical and mental symptoms of AFib.

What is the new drug for atrial fibrillation? ›

Dofetilide, a new class III antiarrhythmic agent, selectively blocks a specific cardiac potassium channel, IKr, increasing the effective refractory period of the myocyte and thereby terminating reentrant arrhythmias.

Why is pulsed field ablation better? ›

PFA, on the other hand, ablates through electroporation, delivering high-energy electrical pulses that breach cell membranes. It appears to be relatively specific to myocardial tissue, limiting collateral damage. This improved safety is one of the major selling points for PFA.

How long is the procedure for a pulsed field ablation? ›

Pulsed‐field ablation compared to previous catheter ablation procedures. The mean time of a PFA procedure is approximately 94.7 min.

How successful is thermal ablation? ›

Therapeutic Effect

The cure curve of the thermal ablation is shown in Fig. 3; the cure rates were 86.0% and 82.3% at 12 and 18 months, respectively, and there were no differences in the cure rates at 6 months between the MWA group and RFA group (MWA vs RFA, 90.6% vs 87.0%; χ 2 = 0.275, P = . 699). Fig.

What is the newest procedure for heart ablation? ›

PFA technology uses electrical pulses to kill targeted cardiac muscle cells, creating scar tissue that blocks the faulty electrical signals that cause atrial fibrillation, an irregular—often rapid—heartbeat. The 4,000 volts of electricity used kill targeted heart cells but not other nearby cells.

What are the results of pulsed field ablation? ›

Pulsed field ablation was shown to be effective at 1 year in 66.2% (95% CI, 57.9 to 73.2) of patients with paroxysmal AF and 55.1% (95% CI, 46.7 to 62.7) of patients with persistent AF.

Is pulsed radiofrequency the same as ablation? ›

Pulsed Radiofrequency (Pulsed RF) Description:

Unlike the related radiofrequency ablation (RF) procedure, pulsed RF does not thermally damage the cells involved and instead disrupts the nerve cells carrying the pain signal by means of a high-frequency electric field that is administered in carefully controlled pulses.

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