Surgeons Role in Atrial Fibrillation

Similar documents
Atrial Fibrillation and Cardiac Device Therapy RAKESH LATCHAMSETTY, MD DIVISION OF ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN HOSPITAL ANN ARBOR, MI

Treating AF: The Newest Recommendations. CardioCase presentation. Ethel s Case. Wayne Warnica, MD, FACC, FACP, FRCPC

Treatments to Restore Normal Rhythm

Advances in the Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation At VCU Medical Center

Atrial Fibrillation: Drugs, Ablation, or Benign Neglect. Robert Kennedy, MD October 10, 2015

COVERAGE GUIDANCE: ABLATION FOR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION

Atrial Fibrillation Cardiac rate control or rhythm control could be the key to AF therapy

Atrial Fibrillation Management Across the Spectrum of Illness

Atrial fibrillation. Treatment Guide

LEADING-EDGE Cardiovascular Care

Atrial Fibrillation (AF) March, 2013

Atrial Fibrillation Peter Santucci, MD Revised May, 2008

Management of Pacing Wires After Cardiac Surgery

Combined Epicardial and Endocardial Ablation for Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation. Ashkan Babaie MD Providence Portland Medical Center

Atrial Fibrillation Catheter Ablation versus Surgical Ablation Treatment: FAST A Two-Center Randomized Clinical Trial

THE INTERNET STROKE CENTER PRESENTATIONS AND DISCUSSIONS ON STROKE MANAGEMENT

Atrial Fibrillation An update on diagnosis and management

Managing the Patient with Atrial Fibrillation

What Are Arrhythmias?

Contemporary Management of Cardiovascular Disease

Atrial Fibrillation The Basics

Visited 9/14/2011. What is Atrial Fibrillation? What you need to know about Atrial Fibrillation. The Normal Heart Rhythm. 1 of 7 9/14/ :50 AM

Atrial Fibrillation 2014 How to Treat How to Anticoagulate. Allan Anderson, MD, FACC, FAHA Division of Cardiology

5 MILLION AMERICANS 1. Atrial Fibrillation (AFib) AFib affects an estimated

Atrial fibrillation. Quick reference guide. Issue date: June The management of atrial fibrillation

FY2015 Proposed Hospital Inpatient Rule Summary

Catheter Ablation. A Guided Approach for Treating Atrial Arrhythmias

Ngaire has Palpitations

The Heart and Vascular Institute at Englewood Hospital and Medical Center

Atrial Fibrillation Based on ESC Guidelines. Moshe Swissa MD Kaplan Medical Center

Anticoagulation before and after cardioversion; which and for how long

Michigan Heart & Vascular Institute ON THE ST. JOSEPH MERCY HOSPITAL CAMPUS, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN

DERBYSHIRE JOINT AREA PRESCRIBING COMMITTEE (JAPC) MANAGEMENT of Atrial Fibrillation (AF)

ACCIDENT AND EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT/CARDIOLOGY

CARDIOLOGY ROTATION GOALS AND OBJECTIVES

Management of Symptomatic Atrial Fibrillation

Current Management of Atrial Fibrillation DISCLOSURES. Heart Beat Anatomy. I have no financial conflicts to disclose

Presenter Disclosure Information

Heart & Vascular Institute of New Jersey. Englewood Hospital and Medical Center

STS/AATS CODING. NEWSLETTER Recent Information on CPT and ICD-9 CM Codes for Cardiothoracic Surgeons

New Treatments for Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation. John C. Andrefsky, MD, FAHA NEOMED Internal Medicine Review course May 5 th, 2013

Diagnosis Code Crosswalk : ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM Cardiac Rhythm and Heart Failure Diagnoses

Atrial Fibrillation: A Different Perspective. Michael Heffernan MD PhD FRCPC FACC Staff Cardiologist Oakville Hospital

Addendum to the Guideline on antiarrhythmics on atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter

Interventional Cardiology Peripheral Interventions Rhythm Management

Dorset Cardiac Centre

Atrial Fibrillation (AF) Explained

Anticoagulation: How Do I Pick From All the Choices? Jeffrey H. Neuhauser, DO, FACC BHHI Primary Care Symposium February 28, 2014

RATE VERSUS RHYTHM CONTROL OF ATRIAL FIBRILLATION: SPECIAL CONSIDERATION IN ELDERLY. Charles Jazra

Results of Surgery in a New Lung Institute in South Texas Focused on the Treatment of Lung Cancer

Ablation For Atrial Fibrillation. Bill Petrellis Electrophysiologist

Atrial Fibrillation The High Risk Obese Patient

9/5/14. Objectives. Atrial Fibrillation (AF)

Atrial Fibrillation: The heart of the matter

Malmö Preventive Project. Cardiovascular Endpoints

Minimally Invasive Mitral Valve Surgery

Recurrent AF: Choosing the Right Medication.

How do you decide on rate versus rhythm control?

Managing Mitral Regurgitation: Repair, Replace, or Clip? Michael Howe, MD Traverse Heart & Vascular

Atrial Fibrillation in the ICU: Attempting to defend 4 controversial statements

ACUTE ATRIAL FIBRILLATION TREATMENT IN THE SURGICAL PATIENT

4/7/2015. Cardiac Rehabilitation: From the other side of the glass door. Chicago, circa Objectives. No disclosures, no conflicts

Cardiology ARCP Decision Aid August 2014

ATRIAL FIBRILLATION (RATE VS RHYTHM CONTROL)

Cardiovascular Endpoints

New in Atrial Fibrillation

INFORMATION FOR PATIENTS AND FAMILIES A Patient s Guide to Living with Atrial Fibrillation

The author has no disclosures

needs, said Overlake Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer David Schultz

FY2015 Final Hospital Inpatient Rule Summary

Name: DEPARTMENT OF CARDIOLOGY CRITERIA FOR RECOMMENDATION AND CATEGORIZATION OF MEDICAL STAFF PRIVILEGES

CLINICAL QUALITY MEASURES FINALIZED FOR ELIGIBLE HOSPITALS AND CRITICAL ACCESS HOSPITALS BEGINNING WITH FY 2014

What Can I Do about Atrial Fibrillation (AF)?

How should we treat atrial fibrillation in heart failure

KIH Cardiac Rehabilitation Program

Radiofrequency Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation. A Guide for Adults

To Bridge or Not to Bridge. Periop Anticoagulation Management. Don Weinshenker, MD Ambulatory Care Denver VAMC

Heart Center Packages

Atrial Fibrillation and Stroke Integris Stroke Conference 2015

Mitral Valve Repair versus Replacement for Severe Ischemic Mitral Regurgitation. Michael Acker, MD For the CTSN Investigators AHA November 2013

Rome, Italy December 4-7, 2012 Rome Cavalieri TIMETABLE

Atrial Fibrillation, Chronic - Antithrombotic Treatment - OBSOLETE

Atrial Fibrillation and Ablation Therapy: A Patient s Guide

GUIDELINES IN ANTIPLATELET AND ANTICOAGULATION RX IN CARDIAC SURGERY

Perioperative Cardiac Evaluation

An All-Star Team Approach to Cardiac Care at Vassar Brothers Medical Center

TABLE 1 Clinical Classification of AF. New onset AF (first detected) Paroxysmal (<7 days, mostly < 24 hours)

Transcription:

Atrial Fibrillation Surgeons Role in Atrial Fibrillation Steven J Feldhaus, MD, FACS 2015 Cardiac Symposium September 18, 2015 Stages of Atrial Fibrillation Paroxysmal (Intermittent) Persistent (Continuous) Longstanding Persistent (>1year) Updated Stages Paroxysmal (PAF) Non-Paroxysmal (N-PAF) Demographics of Atrial Fibrillation Over 2.5 million Americans affected Approximately 160,000 new cases annually Incidence increases with age Doubles with each decade of life Annual Utilization of Health Care Resources Due to AF 350,000 hospitalizations 5.0 million office visits 276,000 emergency department visits 234,000 hospital outpatient department visits $26 Billion annually in US alone $8,700 annually per patient with AF 1

Cardiovascular Complications In AF Patients Are More Common Heart Failure Stroke Chest Pain Tachycardia Palpitations COMPLICATIONS Acute Myocardial Infarction PREVALENCE 3 X Higher 2 X Higher 2 X Higher 5 X Higher 3 X Higher 2.5 X Higher Current Therapy Approach Medical Anticoagulation Cardioversion Rate control Rhythm maintenance Interventional Ablate the AV node and Pace Left Atrial Ablation Surgical Left or Bi-Atrial Ablation LAAM Indications for Interventional or Surgical Ablation Focal vs. Non-Focal Arrhythmias Medication failure Medication intolerance Anticoagulation contraindication Stroke or TIA on anticoagulation Previous failed catheter ablation Patient with AF undergoing other heart surgery Patient prefers a more aggressive approach Micro-Reentrant Focus Macro-Reentrant Circuit Small-Rotor Large-Rotor 2

Completed Maze-IV Procedure Objective of the Maze IV Lesions Patient Selection to Treat Concomitant AF 1. CABG patients with AF 2. AVR patients with AF 3. Mitral patients with AF Current Treatment of Concomitant AF 81,000 Not Treated 76% 21,000 Treated 26% Source: Agency for Health Care Quality and Research (AHRQ) Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Inpatient Sample 2009 3

Under Treatment by Procedure Coronary Artery Bypass with AF Diagnosis MV/Aortic Valve Procedures with AF Diagnosis 35% 30% 25% Reasons Given for Not Treating Concomitant AF Concern about Added Risk 55,000 93% 4,000 7% 27,000 61% 20% 15% 17,000 39% 10% 5% Source: Agency for Health Care Quality and Research (AHRQ) Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Inpatient Sample 2009 0% Adds too much complexity to the primary procedure Added on pump time Reported results may not be reproducible in private practice Not willing to introduce any additional patient risks to primary procedure Lack of society consensus on patient selection, lesion set or energy source Is Risk Increased? Restoration of Normal Sinus Rhythm Do we increase the operative risk by adding the Cox Maze III procedure to aortic valve replacement and coronary artery bypass surgery? Ad N, Henry L, Hunt S, Holmes SD Inova Heart and Vascular Institute, Cardiac Surgery Research, Falls Church, VA J Thor Cardiovas Surg, 2012 Apr;143(4):936-44. doi: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2011.12.018. Epub 2012 Jan 13. Treated AF The addition of the Cox Maze III procedure to AVR or CABG did not convey an increase in major morbidity and perioperative risk. The Cox Maze III may significantly improve their outcome. Untreated AF Louagie et al: Ann Thorac Surg, 2009 4

Freedom from Long-Term Strokes Improved Long-Term Survival Treated AF No AF Treated AF Untreated AF Untreated AF p = 0.0001 Itoh et al: Eur J Cardiothorac Surg, 2006 Lee et al: J Thor CardiovascSurg, 2012 Consensus Recommendation of Societies 2012 Consensus Statement on Surgical AF: The Objective of Each Lesion It is advisable that all patients with documented AF referred for other cardiac surgeries undergo a left or biatrial procedure for AF at an experienced center, unless it will add significant RISK Heart Rhythm Society American College of Cardiology American Heart Association Society of Thoracic Surgeons European Heart Rhythm Association European Cardiac Arrhythmia Society Complete Conduction Block 5

Freedom from AF % Surgical ablation as treatment for the elimination of atrial fibrillation: a meta-analysis. Barnett SD, Ad N. Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 2006 May;131(5):1029-35. Success rates reported for Bi-Atrial Lesions and LA Lesions only 100 100 Both RA and LA Lesions 90 80 70 RA and LA lesions No RA lesions Percent Freedom from AF 50 No RA Lesions * p < 0.001 60 3 mth * 1 yr * 2 yr * 3 yr * Bilateral Unilateral 0 5 10 15 Years The LAA and Strokes Comparative Perioperative Stroke Rate All Strokes (100%) CABG + MVR 90% Ischemic 10% Hemorrhagic CABG + AVR CABG + MV Repair AVR + MVR 20% are Associated with AF MV Repair MVR AVR 95% have LAA Thrombi = 130,000 Strokes / yr CABG Maze + Above 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 National Adult Cardiac Surgery Database 6

LAA Surgical Occlusion Technologies for Surgical Ablation Bipolar Radiofrequency Microwave Laser Unipolar Radiofrequency Cryoablation High frequency ultrasound LAA Exclusion Without A Maze Lone AF pt with contraindication to OAC and not a candidate for a Maze Procedure Lone AF pt who develops CVA/TIA while on OAC LAA Exclusion as a standalone procedure Thoracoscopic use of the AtriClip One hour operative time, extubate in OR CICU vs CTU POD1 Discharge Previous OHS not necessarily a contraindication Summary 1. There are a number of documented advantages in treating concomitant AF at the time of CABG, MVR and AVR surgery. 2. All of the major societies agree that concomitant AF should be treated at the time of other cardiac surgery. 3. The Left Atrial Appendage should be occluded in every patient who has AF. 4. Every caregiver has a role in AF management. 7

Online Resources stopafib.org afstat.com treatafib.org Heart-vavle-surgery.com Thank You! Questions? Credit Slides: Dr. John Johnkoski Dr. Kevin Rist Dr. James Cox 8