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Safety of pulsed field ablation in more than 17,000 patients with atrial fibrillation in the MANIFEST-17K study

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posted on 2024-11-20, 12:00 authored by Emmanuel Ekanem, Gabor SzeplakiGabor Szeplaki, Vivek Y Reddy

Pulsed field ablation (PFA) is an emerging technology for the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF), for which pre-clinical and early-stage clinical data are suggestive of some degree of preferentiality to myocardial tissue ablation without damage to adjacent structures. Here in the MANIFEST-17K study we assessed the safety of PFA by studying the post-approval use of this treatment modality. Of the 116 centers performing post-approval PFA with a pentaspline catheter, data were received from 106 centers (91.4% participation) regarding 17,642 patients undergoing PFA (mean age 64, 34.7% female, 57.8% paroxysmal AF and 35.2% persistent AF). No esophageal complications, pulmonary vein stenosis or persistent phrenic palsy was reported (transient palsy was reported in 0.06% of patients; 11 of 17,642). Major complications, reported for ~1% of patients (173 of 17,642), were pericardial tamponade (0.36%; 63 of 17,642) and vascular events (0.30%; 53 of 17,642). Stroke was rare (0.12%; 22 of 17,642) and death was even rarer (0.03%; 5 of 17,642). Unexpected complications of PFA were coronary arterial spasm in 0.14% of patients (25 of 17,642) and hemolysis-related acute renal failure necessitating hemodialysis in 0.03% of patients (5 of 17,642). Taken together, these data indicate that PFA demonstrates a favorable safety profile by avoiding much of the collateral damage seen with conventional thermal ablation. PFA has the potential to be transformative for the management of patients with AF. 

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Data Availability Statement

Data can be made available upon reasonable request as part of a scientific collaboration with adherence to standards of good scientific practice. Restrictions may apply due to privacy reasons, scale of contributors and ongoing research projects. Requests should be sent to the corresponding author, and a period of 90 days should be expected for a response

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The original article is available at https://www.nature.com/

Published Citation

Ekanem E. et al. Safety of pulsed field ablation in more than 17,000 patients with atrial fibrillation in the MANIFEST-17K study. Nat Med. 2024;30(7):2020-2029.

Publication Date

8 July 2024

PubMed ID

38977913

Department/Unit

  • School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences

Publisher

Nature Publishing Company

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)