Catheter Ablation Beats Drug Therapy in Atrial Fibrillation Patients With Lower Risk Factors: CABANA Subanalysis
Written By : Medha Baranwal
Medically Reviewed By : Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2025-08-26 03:15 GMT | Update On 2025-08-26 03:16 GMT
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China: A new secondary analysis of the Catheter Ablation vs Anti-Arrhythmic Drug Therapy for Atrial Fibrillation (CABANA) trial suggests that the benefit of catheter ablation over drug therapy in atrial fibrillation (AF) largely depends on the patient’s burden of non-modifiable recurrence risk factors (NMRRFs).
The study, led by Zhen Wang and colleagues from the Department of Cardiology, Beijing Anzhen Hospital, Capital Medical University, was published in JAMA Network Open.
Although catheter ablation is widely used to manage AF, large-scale evidence comparing its impact on outcomes across different recurrence risk profiles has been limited. To address this, researchers examined whether the number of NMRRFs—factors that cannot be altered—modifies the relative benefit of ablation compared with anti-arrhythmic drug therapy.
The analysis included 2,185 patients from the original CABANA trial who had complete NMRRF data. These patients were classified into two groups: those with fewer than three NMRRFs and those with three or more. The NMRRFs assessed were AF duration over one year, persistent or long-standing persistent AF, age over 65, and female sex.
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