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Practicality and Safety of Electrical Pulmonary Vein Isolation and Left Atrial Appendage Ligation in Lung Transplant Recipients With Pretransplant Atrial Fibrillation.

BACKGROUND: Lung transplant surgery creates surgical pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) as a routine part of the procedure. However, many patients with pretransplant atrial fibrillation continue to have atrial fibrillation at 1 y. We hypothesized that the addition of electrical PVI and left atrial appendage isolation/ligation (LAL) to the lung transplant procedure restores sinus rhythm at 1 y in patients with pretransplant atrial fibrillation.

METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed all adult lung transplant recipients at the University of California Los Angeles from April 2006 to August 2021. All patients with pretransplant atrial fibrillation underwent concomitant PVI/LAL and were compared with lung transplant recipients without preoperative atrial fibrillation. In-hospital outcomes; 1-y survival; and the incidence of stroke, cardiac readmissions, repeat ablations, and sinus rhythm (composite endpoint) were examined at 1 y for the PVI/LAL cohort.

RESULTS: Sixty-one lung transplant recipients with pretransplant atrial fibrillation underwent concomitant PVI/LAL. No patient in the PVI/LAL cohort required cardiac-related readmission or catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation within 1 y of transplantation. Freedom from the composite endpoint of death, stroke, cardiac readmission, and repeat ablation for atrial fibrillation at 1 y was 85% (95% confidence interval, 73%-92%) for lung transplant recipients treated with PVI/LAL.

CONCLUSIONS: The addition of PVI/LAI to the lung transplant operation in patients with pretransplant atrial fibrillation was safe and effective in maintaining sinus rhythm and baseline risk of stroke at 1 y.

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