Twenty-four - hour holter monitor follow-up does not provide accurate heart rhythm status after surgical atrial fibrillation ablation therapy up to 12 months experience with a novel permanently implantable heart rhythm monitor device

Thorsten Hanke, Efstratios I. Charitos, Ulrich Stierle, Antje Karluss, Ernst Kraatz, Bernhard Graf, Axel Hagemann, Martin Misfeld, Hans H. Sievers

99 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background - Twenty-four-hour Holter monitoring (24HM) is commonly used to assess cardiac rhythm after surgical therapy of atrial fibrillation (AF). However, this "snapshot" documentation leaves a considerable diagnostic window and only stores short-time cardiac rhythm episodes. To improve accuracy of rhythm surveillance after surgical ablation therapy and to compare continuous heart rhythm surveillance versus 24HM follow-up intraindividually, we evaluated a novel implantable continuous cardiac rhythm monitoring (IMD) device (Reveal XT 9525). Methods and Results - Forty-five cardiac surgical patients (male 37, mean age 69.7±9.2 years) with a mean preoperative AF duration of 38±45 m were treated with either left atrial epicardial high-intensity focus ultrasound ablation (n=33) or endocardial cryothermy (n=12) in case of concomitant mitral valve surgery. Rhythm control readings were derived simultaneously from 24HM and IMD at 3-month intervals with a total recording of 2021 hours for 24HM and 220 766 hours for IMD. Mean follow-up was 8.30±3.97 m (range 0 to 12 m). Mean postoperative AF burden (time period spent in AF) as indicated by IMD was 37±43%. Sinus rhythm was documented in 53 readings of 24HM, but in only 34 of these instances by the IMD in the time period before 24HM readings (64%, P<0.0001), reflecting a 24HM sensitivity of 0.60 and a negative predictive value of 0.64 for detecting AF recurrence. Conclusion - For "real-life" cardiac rhythm documentation, continuous heart rhythm surveillance instead of any conventional 24HM follow-up strategy is necessary. This is particularly important for further judgment of ablation techniques, devices as well as anticoagulation and antiarrhythmic therapy.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCirculation
Volume120
Issue numberSUPPL. 1
Pages (from-to)S177-S184
ISSN0009-7322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2009

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