Don’t “overpromise” results
“The important message for clinicians is that when, you are discussing what to expect after atrial fibrillation ablation with your patients, do not overpromise the results. You can inform them that the success of the procedure depends more on how they perform on the baseline exercise test, and less on the ablation itself,” Dr. Jaber said.
Clinicians might want to consider advising their patients to become more active and increase their fitness level before undergoing the procedure, but whether doing so will improve outcomes is still unknown.
“This is what we don’t know. It makes sense. Hopefully, our results will encourage people to be more active before they arrive here for the procedure,” he said. “Our study is retrospective and is hypothesis generating, but we are planning a prospective study where patients will be referred to cardiac rehab prior to having ablation to try to improve their functional class to see if this will improve outcomes.”
Survival of the fittest
In an accompanying editorial commentary, Eric Black-Maier, MD, and Jonathan P. Piccini Sr, MD, from Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C., wrote that the findings have “important implications for clinical practice and raise important additional questions.”
They note that catheter ablation as a first-line rhythm-control strategy, per current recommendations, “seems reasonable” in individuals with high baseline cardiorespiratory fitness, but that the benefit is less clear for patients with poor baseline CRF and uncontrolled risk factors.
“Significant limitations in functional status may be at least partially attributable to uncontrolled [AFib], and patients with limited exercise capacity may stand to gain most from successful catheter ablation,” the editorialists wrote.
“Furthermore, because shorter time from [AFib] diagnosis to catheter ablation has been associated with improved outcomes, the decision to postpone ablation in favor of lifestyle modification is not without potential adverse consequences,” they added.
Dr. Black-Maier and Dr. Piccini agree with the need for additional prospective randomized clinical trials to confirm that exercise training to improve cardiorespiratory fitness before AFib ablation is practical and effective for reducing arrhythmia recurrence.
“Over the past 50-plus years, our understanding of cardiorespiratory fitness, exercise capacity, and arrhythmia occurrence in patients with [AFib] continues to evolve,” the editorialists concluded. Data from the study “clearly demonstrate that arrhythmia-free survival is indeed survival of the fittest. Time will tell if exercise training and improvements in cardiorespiratory fitness can change outcomes after ablation.”
The study was sponsored by the Cleveland Clinic. Dr. Jaber and Dr. Black-Maier report no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Piccini receives grants for clinical research from Abbott, the American Heart Association, the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation, Bayer, Boston Scientific, and Philips and serves as a consultant to Abbott, Allergan, ARCA Biopharma, Biotronik, Boston Scientific, LivaNova, Medtronic, Milestone, MyoKardia, Sanofi, Philips, and UpToDate.
A version of this story originally appeared on Medscape.com.