Atrial fibrillation is the most common complication after  cardiac surgery and is associated with extended in-hospital stay and increased  adverse outcomes, including death and stroke. Pericardial effusion is common  after cardiac surgery and can trigger atrial fibrillation. The researchers tested  the hypothesis that posterior left pericardiotomy, a surgical manoeuvre that  drains the pericardial space into the left pleural cavity, might reduce the  incidence of atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery.
    In this adaptive, randomised, controlled trial, we recruited  adult patients (aged ≥18 years) undergoing elective interventions on the  coronary arteries, aortic valve, or ascending aorta, or a combination of these,  performed by members of the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery from Weill  Cornell Medicine at the New York-Presbyterian Hospital in New York, NY, USA.  Patients were eligible if they had no history of atrial fibrillation or other  arrhythmias or contraindications to the experimental intervention. Eligible  patients were randomly assigned (1:1), stratified by CHA2DS2-VASc score and  using a mixed-block randomisation approach (block sizes of 4, 6, and 8), to  posterior left pericardiotomy or no intervention. Patients and assessors were  blinded to treatment assignment. Patients were followed up until 30 days after  hospital discharge. The primary outcome was the incidence of atrial  fibrillation during postoperative in-hospital stay, which was assessed in the  intention-to-treat (ITT) population. Safety was assessed in the as-treated  population. 
    The Findings are: 
    Between Sept 18, 2017, and Aug 2, 2021, 3601 patients were  screened and 420 were included and randomly assigned to the posterior left  pericardiotomy group (n=212) or the no intervention group (n=208; ITT  population). The median age was 61·0 years (IQR 53·0-70·0), 102 (24%) patients  were female, and 318 (76%) were male, with a median CHA2DS2-VASc score of 2·0  (IQR 1·0-3·0). The two groups were balanced with respect to clinical and  surgical characteristics. No patients were lost to follow-up and data  completeness was 100%. Three patients in the posterior left pericardiotomy  group did not receive the intervention. In the ITT population, the incidence of  postoperative atrial fibrillation was significantly lower in the posterior left  pericardiotomy group than in the no intervention group (37 [17%] of 212 vs 66  [32%] of 208 [p=0·0007]; odds ratio adjusted for the stratification variable  0·44 [95% CI 0·27-0·70; p=0·0005]). Two (1%) of 209 patients in the posterior  left pericardiotomy group and one (<1%) of 211 in the no intervention group  died within 30 days after hospital discharge. The incidence of postoperative  pericardial effusion was lower in the posterior left pericardiotomy group than  in the no intervention group (26 [12%] of 209 vs 45 [21%] of 211; relative risk  0·58 [95% CI 0·37-0·91]). Postoperative major adverse events occurred in six  (3%) patients in the posterior left pericardiotomy group and in four (2%) in  the no-intervention group. No posterior left pericardiotomy related  complications were seen.
    Thus, the researchers concluded that posterior left  pericardiotomy is highly effective in reducing the incidence of atrial  fibrillation after surgery on the coronary arteries, aortic valve, or ascending  aorta, or a combination of these without additional risk of postoperative  complications.
    Reference:
    Posterior left pericardiotomy for the prevention of atrial  fibrillation after cardiac surgery: an adaptive, single-centre, single-blind,  randomised, controlled trial by Mario Gaudino et al. published in the Lancet.
    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34788640/ 
     
     
 
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