Atrial Fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia worldwide, affecting approximately 2.8% of the population, with prevalence increasing with age. AF is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, accounting for about 25% of ischemic strokes, 10% of cryptogenic strokes, and a 10-40% annual increase in hospital admissions due to heart failure or anticoagulant-related events. About 10% of patients undergoing cardiac surgery have preoperative AF. In 1986, Dr. Cox introduced the MAZE procedure, a surgical technique to isolate AF triggers. Initially involving atrial incisions, it evolved to use radiofrequency lines, significantly reducing morbidity and mortality. The MAZE procedure is now strongly recommended (Class Ia evidence) for concomitant cardiac surgery. However, nearly 85% of eligible patients-especially those undergoing closed-chest cardiac surgery-do not receive this treatment due to technical challenges and limited reproducibility of the Cox-Maze IV technique. Pulmonary Vein Isolation (PVI) with posterior wall isolation (PWI-Box) has emerged as an effective alternative, offering similar outcomes to Cox-Maze IV with fewer adverse effects. Innovative devices like the GeminiS (Medtronic) enable minimally invasive, thoracoscopic PVI-PWI-Box procedures without opening the heart, even off-pump. This approach could expand the use of AF ablation during combined sternotomy surgeries, aligning with clinical guidelines. Primary Objective: Assess the efficacy of PWI-Box using GeminiS combined with other cardiac surgeries via sternotomy. Primary Endpoint: Recurrence rate of paroxysmal or persistent AF (per ESC definition) at 1 year postoperatively, confirmed by 24-hour Holter monitoring.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
200
Collection of study data from patient records in the EPICARD national database at the time of surgery, 1 month post-surgery, 12 months post-surgery, 24 months post-surgery and 36 months post-surgery.
Evaluate the efficacy of the PWI box, using GeminiS in combination with other cardiac surgery procedures via sternotomy, at 1 year post-operatively using 24-hour Holter monitoring.
Time frame: 12 months
Evaluation of the efficacy of the PWI box using GeminiS in combination with other cardiac surgery procedures via sternotomy at 2 years postoperatively.
Time frame: 24 months
Evaluation of the efficacy of the PWI box using GeminiS in combination with other cardiac surgery procedures via sternotomy at 3 years postoperatively.
Time frame: 36 months
Evaluation of the rate of secondary endocardial ablation of AF.
Time frame: 12 months
Evaluation of clinicals predictive factors for recurrence of AF after MAZE.
Time frame: 36 months
Evaluate the rate of patients on anticoagulant and/or antiarrhythmic therapy after MAZE surgery.
Time frame: 36 months
Assessment of complication rates associated with the technique used during cardiac surgery.
Time frame: 36 months
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