PolarX vs Arctic Front for Cryoballoon Ablation of Paroxysmal AF: The Randomized COMPARE CRYO Study.

Reichlin, Tobias; Kueffer, Thomas; Knecht, Sven; Madaffari, Antonio; Badertscher, Patrick; Maurhofer, Jens; Krisai, Philipp; Jufer, Corinne; Asatryan, Babken; Heg, Dik; Servatius, Helge; Tanner, Hildegard; Kühne, Michael; Roten, Laurent; Sticherling, Christian (2024). PolarX vs Arctic Front for Cryoballoon Ablation of Paroxysmal AF: The Randomized COMPARE CRYO Study. JACC Clinical electrophysiology, 10(7 Pt 1), pp. 1367-1376. Elsevier 10.1016/j.jacep.2024.03.021

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BACKGROUND

Pulmonary vein isolation is an effective treatment for atrial fibrillation (AF). Cryoballoon ablation using the Arctic Front cryoballoon (Medtronic) was found to be superior to antiarrhythmic drug treatment. Recently, a novel cryoballoon system was introduced (PolarX, Boston Scientific).

OBJECTIVES

The purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of the 2 cryoballoons in a randomized controlled trial.

METHODS

Patients with symptomatic paroxysmal AF were enrolled in 2 centers and randomized 1:1 to pulmonary vein isolation using the PolarX or the Arctic Front cryoballoon. All patients received an implantable cardiac monitor. The primary endpoint was first recurrence of atrial tachyarrhythmia (AF, atrial flutter, or atrial tachycardia [AT]) between days 91 and 365. Procedural safety was assessed by a composite of tamponade, phrenic nerve palsy lasting >24 hours, vascular complications, stroke/transient ischemic attack, atrioesophageal fistula or death up to 30 days.

RESULTS

A total of 201 patients were enrolled. At 1 year, recurrence of atrial tachyarrhythmia had occurred in 41 of 99 patients (41.6%) assigned to the PolarX group and in 48 of 102 patients (47.1%) assigned to the Arctic Front group (HR: 0.85 [95% CI: 0.56-1.30]; P = 0.03 for noninferiority; P = 0.46 for superiority). The safety endpoint occurred in 5 patients (5%) in the PolarX group (n = 5 phrenic nerve palsies lasting >24 hours), whereas no safety endpoints occurred in the Arctic Front group (P = 0.03).

CONCLUSIONS

In this randomized controlled trial using implantable cardiac monitors for continuous rhythm monitoring, the novel PolarX cryoballoon was noninferior compared with the Arctic Front cryoballoon regarding efficacy. However, the PolarX balloon resulted in significantly more phrenic nerve palsies. (Comparison of PolarX and the Arctic Front Cryoballoons for PVI in Patients With Symptomatic Paroxysmal AF [COMPARE-CRYO]; NCT04704986).

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Cardiovascular Disorders (DHGE) > Clinic of Cardiology
04 Faculty of Medicine > Pre-clinic Human Medicine > Department of Clinical Research (DCR)

UniBE Contributor:

Reichlin, Tobias Roman, Kueffer, Thomas, Madaffari, Antonio, Maurhofer, Jens Rudolf, Jufer, Corinne, Asatryan, Babken, Heg, Dierik Hans, Servatius, Helge Simon (B), Tanner, Hildegard, Roten, Laurent

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

2405-5018

Publisher:

Elsevier

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

22 May 2024 15:03

Last Modified:

26 Jul 2024 00:14

Publisher DOI:

10.1016/j.jacep.2024.03.021

PubMed ID:

38752963

Uncontrolled Keywords:

PolarX arctic front atrial fibrillation cryoballoon ablation pulmonary vein isolation

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/196869

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/196869

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