Women with persistent atrial fibrillation need more than pulmonary vein isolation: personalised extra-pulmonary vein ablation strategy vs. pulmonary vein isolation alone in the TAILORED-AF trial

  • Isabel Deisenhofer
  • , Julien Seitz
  • , Marie Sophie Nguyen-Tu
  • , Sabine Lotteau
  • , Clément Bars
  • , Jean Paul Albenque
  • , Sonia Busch
  • , Edouard Gitenay
  • , Stavros Mountantonakis
  • , Antoine Roux
  • , Jérôme Horvilleur
  • , Babe Bakouboula
  • , Saumil Oza
  • , Selim Abbey
  • , Guillaume Theodore
  • , Antoine Lepillier
  • , Yves Guyomar
  • , Francis Bessière
  • , Jaap Jan Smit
  • , Anil Rajendra
  • Daniel H. Cooper, Haroon Rashid, Tom De Potter, Christian De Chillou, Seth Goldbarg, Atul Verma, Gustavo Morales, Paola Milpied, John D. Hummel, Jérôme Kalifa

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Aims There is still conflicting evidence if women with persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) profit from a pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) plus strategy. We evaluated the efficacy of a spatio-temporal dispersion-targeted ablation strategy in women from the TAILORED-AF trial. Methods and results In TAILORED-AF, 370 patients were randomised to either a personalised, artificial intelligence (AI)-guided tailored ablation or to PVI-only. AF substrate mapping data and 12-month ablation outcomes were compared between women and men. Overall, 21% patients were female (70.4 ± 6.9 vs. 64.5 ± 8.5 years for men, P < 0.001). While spatio-temporal dispersion extent was similar between groups, left atrial low-voltage surface area (<0.2 mV) was significantly larger in women (P < 0.01). In women, the single-procedure freedom from AF (76% vs. 50%, log-rank P < 0.001) and any atrial arrhythmia (56% vs. 38%, log-rank P < 0.05) were significantly superior to PVI alone with a tailored procedure. In the PVI-only group, the single-procedure freedom from AF (50% vs. 70%, log-rank P < 0.001) and any atrial arrhythmia (38% vs. 61%, log-rank P < 0.001) were significantly lower in women. After a tailored ablation, no significant differences were observed between women and men regarding freedom from AF (76% vs. 91%, log-rank P = 0.07) or any atrial arrhythmia (56% vs. 62%, log-rank P = 0.69) free survival. Conclusion Compared to men, PVI-only in women with persistent AF leads to a significantly lower freedom from atrial arrhythmia. A personalised spatio-temporal dispersion-targeted ablation strategy led to a higher rate of freedom from any atrial arrhythmia than standard PVI after a single procedure in women and comparable outcomes between women and men.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereuaf281
JournalEuropace
Volume27
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2025

Keywords

  • Artificial intelligence
  • Catheter ablation
  • Women
  • atrial fibrillation

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