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Inicio Clinics Profibrotic pathways and atrial cardiomyopathy in persistent atrial fibrillation
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Vol. 71. Issue 10.
Pages 626 (January 2016)
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Vol. 71. Issue 10.
Pages 626 (January 2016)
READERS OPINION
Open Access
Profibrotic pathways and atrial cardiomyopathy in persistent atrial fibrillation
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Uğur Canpolat
Corresponding author
dru_canpolat@yahoo.com

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Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Cardiology, Ankara, Turkey
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I enjoyed reading the interesting article by Wu et al. 1, in which the authors demonstrated a significant relationship between matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9, a profibrotic and proinflammatory molecule, and recurrence of persistent atrial fibrillation (AF) after catheter ablation. The authors also reported that left atrial (LA) diameter and a history of AF were independent predictors of AF recurrence after ablation therapy.

In recent years, the term fibrotic atriocardiomyopathy (FACM) has been proposed to define the atrial remodeling process resulting in atrial myocyte abnormalities and causing fibrosis in patients with lone AF 2. Previous studies have confirmed that the majority of patients with AF without apparent structural heart disease (referred to as ‘lone’ AF) exhibit a chronically fibrotic bi-atrial substrate 3. Electroanatomical mapping and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging with delayed enhancement (DE-MRI) are clinical tools that are potentially useful for diagnosing FACM 4,5. Atrial fibrosis is a critical pathophysiological abnormality of the atrial substrate; is associated with electrical, contractile, and structural remodeling of atrial tissue; and is involved in both the initiation and the maintenance of AF 6,7. The MMP family regulates the degradation of atrial collagen and other extracellular matrix molecules. Impairments in this well-organized pathway occur during atrial remodeling and fibrosis 8. As a member of the MMP family, MMP-9 is known to be a marker of enhanced proinflammatory and profibrotic pathway activities. The study by Wu et al. 1 included only patients with persistent AF without apparent structural heart disease and demonstrated an association between MMP-9 levels and AF recurrence after catheter ablation for persistent AF; however, their study lacked direct evidence regarding the mechanisms underlying AF recurrence. The authors should have commented on their procedural electroanatomical mapping data, which may have highlighted the mechanism underlying AF recurrence, in the event that the MMP-9 levels correlated with the area of LA scar tissue (indicating LA fibrosis). Furthermore, their study lacked data on whether the type of persistent AF was primary or secondary in these patients. It was recently proposed that persistent AF can occur either as a sustained arrhythmia progressing from paroxysmal AF or as primary persistent AF without any history of spontaneously terminating episodes 9. Researchers have reported that the AF recurrence rate after catheter ablation was significantly higher in patients with primary persistent AF than in patients with secondary AF progressing from paroxysmal AF. The authors also commented on revolutionary studies demonstrating the failure of using additional lines during catheter ablation to treat persistent AF 10.

In conclusion, serum MMP-9 levels may significantly predict the success rate of catheter ablation therapy in patients with persistent AF, probably by indicating the extent of LA fibrosis. However, additional non-invasive or invasive measures should be used in conjunction with this biomarker to predict the success rate of catheter ablation for the treatment of persistent AF.

REFERENCES
[1]
G Wu , S Wang , M Cheng , B Peng , J Liang , H Huang , et al.
The serum matrix metalloproteinase-9 level is an independent predictor of recurrence after ablation of persistent atrial fibrillation.
[2]
H Kottkamp .
Fibrotic atrial cardiomyopathy: a specific disease/syndrome supplying substrates for atrial fibrillation, atrial tachycardia, sinus node disease, AV node disease, and thromboembolic complications.
[3]
A Boldt , U Wetzel , J Lauschke , J Weigl , J Gummert , G Hindricks , et al.
Fibrosis in left atrial tissue of patients with atrial fibrillation with and without underlying mitral valve disease.
[4]
U Canpolat , A Oto , T Hazirolan , H Sunman , H Yorgun , L Sahiner , et al.
A prospective DE-MRI study evaluating the role of TGF-beta1 in left atrial fibrosis and implications for outcomes of cryoballoon-based catheter ablation: new insights into primary fibrotic atriocardiomyopathy.
J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol, 26 (2015), pp. 251-259
[5]
RS Oakes , TJ Badger , EG Kholmovski , N Akoum , NS Burgon , EN Fish , et al.
Detection and quantification of left atrial structural remodeling with delayed-enhancement magnetic resonance imaging in patients with atrial fibrillation.
[6]
B Burstein , S Nattel .
Atrial fibrosis: mechanisms and clinical relevance in atrial fibrillation.
[7]
U Canpolat , A Oto , H Yorgun , H Sunman , L Sahiner , EB Kaya , et al.
Association of plasma fibronectin level with left atrial electrical and structural remodelling in lone paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: a cross-sectional study.
Turk Kardiyol Dern Ars, 43 (2015), pp. 259-268
[8]
RR Huxley , FL Lopez , RF MacLehose , JH Eckfeldt , D Couper , C Leiendecker-Foster , et al.
Novel association between plasma matrix metalloproteinase-9 and risk of incident atrial fibrillation in a case-cohort study: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study.
PloS One, 8 (2013),
[9]
T Konrad , C Theis , H Mollnau , S Sonnenschein , BQ Ocete , K Bock , et al.
Primary Persistent Atrial Fibrillation: A Distinct Arrhythmia Subentity of an Ablation Population.
J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol, 26 (2015), pp. 1289-1294
[10]
A Verma , CY Jiang , TR Betts , J Chen , I Deisenhofer , R Mantovan , et al.
Approaches to catheter ablation for persistent atrial fibrillation.

No potential conflict of interest was reported.

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