Efficacy and Safety of Same-Day Discharge for Atrial Fibrillation Ablation

Marc W Deyell, Richard A Leather, Laurent Macle, Jacqueline Forman, Paul Khairy, Ruth Zhang, Lillian Ding, Santabhanu Chakrabarti, John A Yeung-Lai-Wah, Christopher Lane, Paul G Novak, Laurence D Sterns, Matthew T Bennett, Zachary W Laksman, Markus B Sikkel, Jason G Andrade, Marc W Deyell, Richard A Leather, Laurent Macle, Jacqueline Forman, Paul Khairy, Ruth Zhang, Lillian Ding, Santabhanu Chakrabarti, John A Yeung-Lai-Wah, Christopher Lane, Paul G Novak, Laurence D Sterns, Matthew T Bennett, Zachary W Laksman, Markus B Sikkel, Jason G Andrade

Abstract

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy, health care utilization, and safety of a same-day discharge protocol.

Background: Catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common ablation performed. Increasing volumes of AF ablation are placing demands on hospital resources. In response, our institutions developed a same-day discharge protocol for AF ablation.

Methods: This was a multicenter cohort study of all patients undergoing AF ablation from 2010 to 2014 at 2 major centers. The primary efficacy outcome was the proportion of successful same-day discharges. The primary health care utilization outcome was 30-day hospital readmission for any reason. The primary safety outcome was a composite of 30-day death, stroke/transient ischemic attack or embolism, or bleeding requiring hospitalization.

Results: A total of 3,054 patients underwent AF ablation from 2010 to 2014 and met inclusion criteria. Same-day discharge was achieved in 79.2% (2,418 of 3,054). Hospital readmission at 30 days was 7.7% for the same-day discharge group, 10.2% for those who remained in the hospital overnight without complications (p = 0.055 for comparison with same-day discharge), and 19.5% (p < 0.001) for those who remained in the hospital with procedural complications (7.7%). Complication rates from discharge to 30 days (excluding immediate procedural complications) were 0.37% for the same-day discharge group, 0.36% (p = 0.999) for those kept overnight without complications, and 2.5% (p = 0.044) for those with initial procedural complications.

Conclusions: Same-day discharge after AF ablation is feasible in the majority of patients with use of a standardized protocol. This approach was not associated with higher hospital readmission or complication rates after discharge.

Keywords: atrial fibrillation; catheter ablation; complications; health care utilization; hospitalization.

Copyright © 2020 American College of Cardiology Foundation. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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