Catheter ablation linked to lower incidence of dementia in AF patients

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People with atrial fibrillation (AF) have a reduced risk of dementia if they undergo catheter ablation to restore the normal rhythm of their heart, according to a new study published in the European Heart Journal.

Previous work, published last year by the same group of researchers showed that AF was linked to an increased risk of dementia, even in people who had not suffered a stroke. The new findings published today show that catheter ablation reduced the incidence of dementia by nearly a third (27%) in atrial fibrillation patients compared to those who tried to control their condition with medication alone during the follow-up period. The patients were followed for up to twelve years, with at least 50% of them being followed for 52 months.

Researchers led by Boyoung Joung, professor of cardiology and internal medicine at Yonsei University College of Medicine, (Seoul, Republic of Korea), and Gregory Lip, professor of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Liverpool, (Liverpool UK), and an adjunct professor at Yonsei University College of Medicine, analysed data from the National Health Insurance Service (NHIS) of Korea on 834,735 adults newly diagnosed with AF from 1 January 2005 to 31 December 2015. They identified 9,119 patients who had ablation and 17,978 who received medical therapies.

During the follow-up period, there were 164 cases of dementia in the group of people who had ablation, and 308 cases in the medical therapy group. This gave an incidence rate per 1,000 person-years (the number of years of follow-up multiplied by the number of people in the study) of 5.6 and 8.1 for the ablation and medical therapy groups respectively.

Gregory YH Lip, Price-Evans chair of cardiovascular medicine
Gregory Lip

Joung said: “The proportion of people who developed dementia during the follow-up period was 6.1% in the ablation group and 9.1% in the medical therapy group. This suggests that three people per 100 of the AF population avoid dementia if they undergo catheter ablation, and 34 patients would need to be treated to prevent one case of dementia during the follow-up period.”

When they looked at different types of dementia, they found that ablation was linked to a 23% lower incidence of Alzheimer’s disease compared to medical therapies (4.1 versus 5 per 1,000 person-years respectively) and a 50% decrease in vascular dementia (1.2 versus 2.2 per 1,000 person-years respectively). After removing patients who suffered a stroke during follow-up from the analysis, ablation was still signficantly associated with a reduced risk of overall dementia and of vascular dementia, but a statistically non-significant reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

The researchers also looked at 5,863 matched patients who underwent ablation to see if there was a positive relationship with the observed low dementia rate and the ablation procedure itself or the success of ablation.

Lip said: “If we defined ablation failure as requiring repeat ablations, cardioversion or medical therapies, then we found that the procedure failed in 45.3%: 2661 patients. We found that successful ablation was significantly associated with a 44% reduced risk of dementia compared with medical therapy but if ablation failed, we did not see a significant reduction in risk. This suggests that it is maintaining the regular rhythm of the heart with successful ablation, and not ablation itself, that may contribute to a lower risk of dementia in patients with AF.”

The link between ablation and lower risk of dementia was consistent regardless of sex, residential area, use of health care, heart failure, history of stroke, blood thinning medications and scores for predicting stroke (CHA2DS2-VASc score), the study team found.

First author of the study, Daehoon Kim, a fellow of cardiology at Yonsei University College of Medicine, said: “Due to the observational nature of the study, our findings show only an association between ablation and dementia. To answer the question whether ablation for AF reduces the incidence of dementia, a randomised controlled trial investigating cognitive outcomes is needed. However, we believe the finding that only successful ablation is associated with lower dementia risk is important because it suggests there might be a dose-response relationship between ablation maintaining a regular heart rhythm and a lower risk. We are going to investigate whether a rhythm control strategy for atrial fibrillation is associated with a lower risk of dementia, compared with a strategy to control the rate of the heartbeat.”

The researchers believe their findings from the Korean population can apply to other populations as well. Limitations of the study include the fact that the researchers were unable to determine the reason for undergoing ablation or medical therapy and this might be a source of bias; although they adjusted for factors that could confound the results, unidentified confounding factors might remain; and milder cases of dementia may have been undetected.


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