Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2012; 60 - PP115
DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1297762

Atrial fibrillation: Event-recorder based monitoring of MAZE-outcome

B Niemann 1, E Aydin 1, S Rohrbach 2, P Roth 1, C Orhan 1, A Kunold 1, A Böning 1
  • 1UKGM Gießen, Klinik für Herz- Kinderherz- und Gefäßchirurgie, Gießen, Germany
  • 2Justus Liebig Universität Gießen, Physiologisches Institut, Gießen, Germany

Atrial fibrillation (Afib) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia, resulting in stroke, reduced cardiac function, reduction of life expectancy and exercise capacity, increased number of hospitalisations and a doubled mortality rate. Therefore, therapeutic strategies to reduce morbidity and increase quality of life are required. The MAZE-Procedure (MAZE) has become a widely and effectively used stand-alone or additive combined operative therapy for Afib. However, differences in energy sources, ablation lines and follow up procedures result in incommensurable results. Consequently, guidelines for (contra-) indications and definitions of preoperative markers for outcome remain difficult to define. We therefore initiated a prospective follow up study to identify preoperative markers of MAZE-success and perioperative outcome. From 10/2009 to 09/2011 38 patients (13 female/25 male; CABG/AVR/MVR/TVR/combination) underwent MAZE (paroxysmal n=5; chronic n=33). An event recorder was implanted in all those patients. Standardized antiarrhythmic therapy and 6-month-follow up for 2 years was initiated.

30 day mortality in those patients was 6/38 and was neither related to Afib-duration, echocardiographic parameters nor to age but to female sex and high preoperative EuroScore. 54.8% of discharged patients had sinus rhythm independently of preoperative left atrial diameter (p=0.481), LVEF (p=0.973) or primary operative procedure. 11 patients have completed the 6-month follow-up so far. During follow up no mortality or stroke was observed. 81% (n=8) of those patients had sinus rhythm (Afib<1%, periods max <15min), 1 patient gained sinus rhythm after additional interventional catheter ablation, in 1 patient sinus rhythm stabilized with postoperative bradycardia-tachycardia-syndrome after DDD-PM implantation and only one patient (9.09%) retained a therapeutically relevant Afib. Interestingly, procedural success tends to be lower in patients with high body mass index (BMI 27.63±1.56 vs. 33.58±2.16; p=0.057) and periprocedural mortality risk seems to be significantly elevated in females. Thus, identification of preoperative risk markers and continuous follow up of patients may help to improve MAZE long-term success.