Table 27.
Study/Author (y) | No. Pts. | Inclusion | Exclusion | Intervention | Primary Outcome | Death and Hospitalization | Death | Hospital izations | Reduction in AF | LVEF | QOL | 6MWT | Peak VO2 Max | BNP |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Roy (2008)60 | 1376 | LVEF <35%, CHF | AAD (primarily amiodarone) vs rate control | Cardiovascular mortality was no different between rhythm vs rate control | No change | No difference | No difference | |||||||
MacDonald (2011)8 | 41 | Persistent AF; LVEF <35%, CHF II-IV | PAF; QRS >150 | RF to medical therapy | Similar increase in CMR LVEF | No difference | Improved with RF | Improved | No change | No change | ||||
ARC-HF: Jones (2013)6 | 52 | Persistent AF; LVEF <35%, CHF | RF to medical therapy | Improvement in peak VO2 with RF | No change | No difference | No difference | No change | Improved with RF | No change | Improved | |||
CAMTAF (2014)5 | 50 | Persistent AF; LVEF <50%; CHF | RF to medical therapy | LVEF significantly improved with RF | No change | No difference | Improved | Improved with RF | Improved | |||||
AATAC (2016)4 | 203 | Persistent AF; LVEF <40%, CHF II-III | RF to amiodarone | At 24 mo, RF patients more likely to be in NSR | Improvement with RF | Improved | Improved | Improved | Improved with ablation | Improved | ||||
CAMERA MRI (2017)12 | 66 | Persistent AF; LVEF <45%, CHF II-III; idiopathic CM | RF to medical therapy | Improved LVEF with RF | Improved | No change | No change | Improved | ||||||
CASTLE-AF (2018)9 | 363 | PAF or persistent AF; LVEF <36%, CHF II-IV and ICD | RF to medical therapy | Composite of death and hospitalization lower with RF | Improvement with RF | Improved | Improved | Improved | ||||||
AMICA (2019)7 | 140 | Persistent AF; LVEF <36% | RF to medical therapy | No difference in change in LVEF | No change | No change | No change | No change | ||||||
CABANA substudy (2021)14 | 778 | Clinical HF (largely HFpEF) | RF to medical therapy | Decrease in composite of MACE | Improved | Improved with RF | Improved with RF | |||||||
RAFT-AF (2022)11 | 411 | ≥4 PAF/y or persistent AF, NYHA class II or III HF, elevated pro-BNP | RF to medical therapy | No difference in change in mortality/HF | No difference in change in mortality/HF | No change | No change | Improved with RF | Improved with RF | Improved with RF | Improved with RF | Improved with RF | ||
Meta-analysis-Turagam (2019)13 | 775 | RF to medical therapy | Improved | Reduced | Improved | Improved | Improved | Improved | ||||||
Meta-analysis-Chen (2020)3 | 1112 | RF to medical therapy | Improved | Reduced | Improved with RF | Improved | Improved | |||||||
Meta-analysis-Pan (2021)10 | 775 | RF to medical therapy | Improved | Reduced | Improved | Improved | Improved |
AAD indicates antiarrhythmic drug; AATAC, Ablation vs Amiodarone for Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation in Patients With Congestive Heart Failure and an Implanted ICD/CRTD; AF, atrial fibrillation; AMICA, Atrial Fibrillation Management in Congestive Heart Failure With Ablation; ARC-HF, A Randomised Trial to Assess Catheter Ablation Versus Rate Control in the Management of Persistent Atrial Fibrillation in Chronic Heart Failure; BNP, brain natriuretic peptide; CABANA, Catheter Ablation vs Antiarrhythmic Drug Therapy for Atrial Fibrillation; CAMERA MRI, Catheter Ablation versus Medical Rate Control in Atrial Fibrillation and Systolic Dysfunction-an MRI-Guided Multi-centre Randomised Controlled Trial; CAMTAF, Catheter Ablation Versus Medical Treatment of AF in Heart Failure; CASTLE-AF, Catheter Ablation versus Standard Conventional Therapy in Patients with Left Ventricular Dysfunction and Atrial Fibrillation; CHF, congestive heart failure; CM, cardiomyopathy; CMR, cardiac magnetic resonance: HF, heart failure; HFpEF, heart failure with persistent ejection fraction; ICD, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; NSR, normal sinus rhythm; NYHA, New York Heart Association; PAF, paroxysmal atrial fibrillation; QOL, quality of life; RAFT-AF, Rhythm Control–Catheter Ablation With or Without Anti-arrhythmic Drug Control of Maintaining Sinus Rhythm Versus Rate Control With Medical Therapy and/or Atrio-ventricular Junction Ablation and Pacemaker Treatment for Atrial Fibrillation; RF, radiofrequency; VO2 max, maximal oxygen consumption; and 6MWT, 6-minute walk test.