Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is a surgery that improves blood flow to the heart muscle.

TOP INSIGHT
Surgical ablation during #CABG offers a 4.4-month median survival boost vs. no ablation. #CardiacSurgery #AtrialFibrillation #bypass_surgery
Long-Term Survival Benefits of Surgical Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation During CABG
“This study is one of several recent analyses suggesting that surgical ablation may meaningfully improve survival in patients with preexisting atrial fibrillation undergoing CABG,” said Justin Schaffer, MD, lead author of the study and medical director of surgical outcomes at Baylor Scott & White – The Heart Hospital. “Our analysis found that the treatment effect of surgical ablation for AF manifested late, over two years after CABG. We hypothesize this is because ablation leads to a decreased incidence of tachycardia-related heart failure, which translates to improved late survival.”To reduce bias related to the fact that healthier patients are more likely to receive ablation, the researchers used two advanced statistical methods.
One method (overlap propensity score weighting) adjusted for measured differences between patients, while the other (a surgeon-preference instrumental variable analysis) compared outcomes among patients treated by surgeons who frequently ablate and those who rarely do. This method simulates the effects of randomization by leveraging variation in in clinical practice among surgeons to balance unmeasured differences between patients. Under certain assumptions, patients can be thought of as being pseudo-randomly distributed among surgeons with different approaches to ablation.
“We used both as-treated and surgeon-preference analyses to provide a more complete picture of ablation’s potential benefits,” Dr. Schaffer explained. “While each method has strengths and limitations, the consistency of findings across both approaches is encouraging, especially given that a large-scale randomized trial in this area does not appear forthcoming.”
“These data underscore the importance of guideline adherence and hopefully will lead to a reevaluation of surgical decision-making for patients with AF,” added study coauthor John Squiers, MD, Baylor Scott & White The Heart Hospital.
MEDINDIA




Email








