EP Edge Journal Watch

Niraj Sharma MD FACC FHRS

Welcome to EP Edge Journal Watch — where cardiac electrophysiology meets evidence, precision, and perspective. Hosted by Dr. Niraj Sharma, this bi-weekly podcast distills high-impact cardiovascular and EP research into clear, clinically meaningful insights. Each episode goes beyond headlines and abstracts to uncover what new studies actually mean for patient care, decision-making, and the future of electrophysiology. What EP Edge Journal Watch stands for: Evidence-based practice Precision electrophysiology A forward-thinking, edge-driven approach to how we interpret and apply data in real-world clinical settings. Whether you’re an electrophysiologist, cardiologist, researcher, trainee, or allied health professional, EP Edge Journal Watch brings you the signal — not the noise. Expect sharp summaries, thoughtful commentary, and practical takeaways designed for the busy clinician who wants to stay ahead of the curve

  1. EP Edge™ Journal Watch Breaking News Special Edition: CHAMPION-AF, PRAGUE-17, and CLOSURE-AF — LAAC vs DOACs in Atrial Fibrillation

    11 HR AGO

    EP Edge™ Journal Watch Breaking News Special Edition: CHAMPION-AF, PRAGUE-17, and CLOSURE-AF — LAAC vs DOACs in Atrial Fibrillation

    In this EP Edge™ Journal Watch Breaking News Special Edition, Dr. Niraj Sharma delivers an in-depth analysis of the CHAMPION-AF trial and places its findings in direct comparative context with PRAGUE-17 and CLOSURE-AF, three pivotal randomized studies shaping the modern debate around left atrial appendage closure (LAAC/LAAO) versus direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation. This episode goes well beyond a simple trial summary. It examines whether percutaneous left atrial appendage closure can truly challenge contemporary DOAC-first management in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, and whether the latest evidence justifies broader expansion of LAAC in routine electrophysiology practice. The discussion focuses on the real clinical questions facing electrophysiologists, cardiologists, and stroke prevention specialists in 2026: Which patients remain best served by oral anticoagulation? Where does LAAC still have a meaningful role? And how should clinicians interpret noninferiority claims when ischemic events, bleeding definitions, and procedural risk tell a more complicated story? The episode begins with a detailed breakdown of CHAMPION-AF, including trial design, patient selection, baseline stroke and bleeding risk, endpoint construction, and the interpretation of the primary efficacy and safety results. Particular attention is given to the noninferiority framework, the absolute margin used in the study, the numerical ischemic stroke signal in the device arm, the distinction between procedure-related and non–procedure-related bleeding, and the critical question of whether the reported bleeding advantage is robust enough to offset the upfront risk of device implantation. The discussion also explores why the lack of drug-specific DOAC breakdown matters when interpreting a comparator arm labeled broadly as “NOAC therapy.” The episode then turns to PRAGUE-17, a landmark randomized comparison of LAAC versus DOAC therapy in high-risk atrial fibrillation patients, and explains why it remains one of the strongest supportive trials for selective LAAC use. Dr. Sharma reviews the long-term follow-up, the late divergence in nonprocedural bleeding, the importance of the apixaban-dominant comparator arm, and why PRAGUE-17 supports careful patient selection rather than routine substitution of LAAC for anticoagulation. The analysis then addresses CLOSURE-AF, a major counterweight in this space and arguably one of the most clinically relevant studies for real-world decision-making. In an older, frailer, higher-risk atrial fibrillation cohort, CLOSURE-AF did not establish a compelling advantage for LAAC over medical therapy. This episode explains why that matters, how procedural risk and early harm affect interpretation, and why CLOSURE-AF materially raises the evidentiary bar for any effort to expand LAAC indications. Across all three trials, this EP Edge™ Journal Watch special edition provides a true comparative analysis of CHAMPION-AF, PRAGUE-17, and CLOSURE-AF, highlighting differences in population risk, device strategy, endpoint design, bleeding definitions, ischemic outcomes, and external validity. The goal is not simply to ask whether LAAC “works,” but to determine where LAAC fits in the actual clinical flow of contemporary atrial fibrillation care. This episode is ideal for listeners seeking a high-level, clinically grounded discussion of atrial fibrillation stroke prevention, Watchman FLX, left atrial appendage occlusion, LAAC versus DOACs, noninferiority trial interpretation, bleeding risk, ischemic stroke outcomes, and evidence-based patient selection in electrophysiology practice. For electrophysiologists, cardiologists, fellows, APPs, and clinicians following the evolving literature on CHAMPION-AF, PRAGUE-17, and CLOSURE-AF, this special edition offers a nuanced, data-driven perspective on one of the most important current controversies in heart rhythm medicine.

    27 min
  2. EP Edge Journal Watch Issue 16: 11 New EP Trials on AF Ablation, SVT, Anticoagulation, PFA Safety, VT Pacing, and OHCA

    23 MAR

    EP Edge Journal Watch Issue 16: 11 New EP Trials on AF Ablation, SVT, Anticoagulation, PFA Safety, VT Pacing, and OHCA

    In this episode of EP Edge Journal Watch, Dr. Sharma reviews 11 important new studies shaping modern cardiac electrophysiology, arrhythmia care, and cardiovascular risk management. This March 2026 issue covers intravenous amiodarone in preexcited atrial fibrillation, the NURSECAT-AF randomized trial of nurse-led care after AF ablation, left bundle branch area antitachycardia pacing vs right ventricular ATP, varenicline for ventricular ectopy after myocardial infarction, and the first clinical experience with reversible electroporation mapping in atrial flutter. The episode also examines abelacimab vs rivaroxaban in older patients with atrial fibrillation from AZALEA-TIMI 71, device-assisted vs standard Valsalva for supraventricular tachycardia, the first reported case of severe pulmonary vein stenosis after pulsed field ablation, and the COBRRA trial comparing apixaban vs rivaroxaban bleeding risk in acute venous thromboembolism. Rounding out the issue are a nationwide analysis of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest on the first weekday after holidays and why the 2026 ACC/AHA multisociety dyslipidemia guideline matters directly to EP clinicians. This is a practical, evidence-focused review of where electrophysiology is heading: smarter AF care pathways, safer anticoagulation, better mapping, more physiologic pacing, improved SVT management, and a broader understanding of sudden cardiac risk. Full newsletter: EP Edge Journal Watch with references and infographics is available on LinkedIn as well as on Substack, epedge.substack.com. If you want, I can also make this into a shorter Transistor version, a more keyword-dense SEO version, or a more polished Apple/Spotify-style episode summary.

    22 min
  3. EP Edge™ Journal Watch Issue 15: PFA Recurrence, Bayesian AF Ablation, Non-PV Triggers, Diltiazem-DOAC Risk, and Stroke Prevention After AF Ablation

    16 MAR

    EP Edge™ Journal Watch Issue 15: PFA Recurrence, Bayesian AF Ablation, Non-PV Triggers, Diltiazem-DOAC Risk, and Stroke Prevention After AF Ablation

    In EP Edge™ Journal Watch Issue 15, Dr. Niraj Sharma reviews some of the most important new studies in electrophysiology and atrial fibrillation management from March 2026. This episode explores whether early recurrence after pulsed field ablation (PFA) should still be viewed as part of a traditional blanking period or whether it may represent an early marker of later treatment failure. It also examines a Bayesian meta-analysis comparing PFA with thermal ablation, with practical discussion on what Bayesian statistics actually mean for clinicians and how probability-based interpretation may differ from standard p-value thinking. The episode also takes a closer look at the significance of non-pulmonary vein triggers in first-time AF ablation, especially the clinical consequences of identifying reproducible triggers that are not ultimately ablated. Additional featured studies include a provocative reassessment of Class Ic antiarrhythmic therapy after PCI, a clinically important report on rapid battery depletion and CIED generator-related defects, and early performance data on the next-generation Amulet 360 left atrial appendage occlusion device. Other key topics include the procedural implications of performing PFA near metallic LAAO devices, why activated clotting time (ACT) values may not be interchangeable across different testing platforms, and what new data tell us about athlete bradycardia, including the possible interplay between endurance training, physiologic remodeling, and genetic predisposition. The episode also reviews the growing evidence that diltiazem combined with factor Xa inhibitors such as apixaban or rivaroxaban may increase bleeding risk, an issue with direct day-to-day prescribing relevance. Finally, this issue closes with a broader synthesis of OCEAN, ALONE AF, and OPTION, exploring what these studies may mean for the future of stroke prevention after AF ablation and whether post-ablation anticoagulation decisions are moving toward a more individualized model based on rhythm status, stroke risk, bleeding liability, and left atrial appendage management. This is a high-yield podcast for electrophysiologists, cardiologists, fellows, advanced practice providers, and clinicians interested in AF ablation, pulsed field ablation, LAAO, anticoagulation, cardiac devices, and evidence-based heart rhythm management.

    20 min
  4. EP Edge Journal Watch #14 (March 2026):  AF Ablation at the Extremes: Octogenarians, HFrEF PVI-Only, LAAC, PFA Hemolysis/AKI & Redo Timing

    9 MAR

    EP Edge Journal Watch #14 (March 2026): AF Ablation at the Extremes: Octogenarians, HFrEF PVI-Only, LAAC, PFA Hemolysis/AKI & Redo Timing

    In EP Edge Journal Watch Issue 14 (March 2026), Dr. Niraj Sharma breaks down the most clinically “edge-case” decisions in contemporary electrophysiology—where ablation strategy, stroke prevention, and safety monitoring collide. This episode covers: AF ablation in octogenarians (REHEALTH AF): why the signal may be less about short-term hard outcomes and more about symptoms, function, and patient-centered endpoints.Heart failure + AF (POLAR-HF): the case for a standardized PVI-only approach in HFrEF—and when simplicity is the point.LAAC after ablation (OPTION subanalysis): whether left atrial appendage closure changes AF recurrence (and why rhythm success ≠ stroke immunity).Severe spontaneous echo contrast before LAAC (OCEAN-LAAC): when “smoke” is a high-risk biology phenotype that should change surveillance and post-device antithrombotic strategy.Multimorbidity and PVI: what long-term recurrence really looks like in high comorbidity-burden patients—and how to reset goals toward AF burden and symptoms.Pulsed field ablation safety: hemolysis markers (haptoglobin depletion), AKI risk under routine hydration, and who needs tighter post-procedure monitoring (Farapulse vs PulseSelect).Redo ablation timing: evidence that earlier repeat ablation after recurrence may improve rhythm and quality-of-life outcomes.Plus: PACED score for LVEF recovery after AF ablation, LBBAP upgrades for pacing-induced cardiomyopathy, and a cardiology bonus trial (APERITIF) on LV thrombus prevention after anterior STEMI.References and visuals are available with the newsletter on LinkedIn and on Substack (epedge.substack.com).

    33 min
  5. EP Edge Journal Watch Issue 13 (March 2026): Ultrashort AF, ILR Accuracy, Semaglutide + Ablation, PADIT, PCOS, LBBAP and Next-Gen nanosecond PFA (SCENA-AF)

    2 MAR

    EP Edge Journal Watch Issue 13 (March 2026): Ultrashort AF, ILR Accuracy, Semaglutide + Ablation, PADIT, PCOS, LBBAP and Next-Gen nanosecond PFA (SCENA-AF)

    EP Edge Journal Watch — Issue 13 (March 2026) explores a core 2026 EP problem: signal detection (wearables, patches, ILRs) and energy delivery (next-gen PFA) are advancing faster than the clinical rules we use to interpret risk and outcomes.  In this episode, Dr. Niraj Sharma breaks down what’s clinically actionable, what’s methodologically fragile, and what should change practice now versus what needs better evidence. Topics covered (high-level): Ultrashort atrial arrhythmias (30 seconds) and what they may imply on continuous monitoringImplantable loop recorder (ILR) “AF alerts” and why vendor performance is not interchangeable Semaglutide (GLP-1) and AF ablation in obesity: metabolic modulation as an EP strategy, not an afterthoughtNanosecond pulsed field ablation (nsPFA) for paroxysmal AF (SCENA-AF) and what it means for workflow (including anesthesia strategy) A high-stakes coronary spasm signal in a population-enriched cohortLBBAP perforation detection: interpreting iEGMs as phenotype, not just amplitude PADIT score validation by infection subtype—toward phenotype-aware preventionPCOS and long-term arrhythmia risk: a women’s cardiovascular EP domain hiding in plain sight Read the full newsletter (graphics + references): epedge.substack.com Subscribe on LinkedIn (EP Edge Journal Watch): https://lnkd.in/e-Wa4diC Subscribe to EP Edge (Monthly Deep Dives): https://lnkd.in/ep3NdZUz Subscribe Substack: epedge.substack.com

    24 min
  6. EP Edge™ Journal Watch: February 2026 Issue 12: AF Ablation “Success” Reframed: ADVENT-LTO 4-Year PFA Durability, 20-Year PVI Outcomes, Monitoring Rules, CIED Risks & PICM

    23 FEB

    EP Edge™ Journal Watch: February 2026 Issue 12: AF Ablation “Success” Reframed: ADVENT-LTO 4-Year PFA Durability, 20-Year PVI Outcomes, Monitoring Rules, CIED Risks & PICM

    In this episode of EP Edge™ Journal Watch (Issue 12, February 2026), Dr. Niraj Sharma breaks down a deceptively simple question in atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation: what does “success” actually mean—at 1 year, 4 years, and 20 years? We start with ADVENT-LTO, the long-term extension of the randomized ADVENT trial, examining 4-year outcomes of pulse field ablation (PFA) vs thermal ablation—and why redo ablation and hospital-based interventions may matter more than a single headline p-value. Next, we zoom way out with a 20-year pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) cohort, showing how AF behaves like a progressive atrial cardiomyopathy over decades—and why very late recurrences may occur even when PV isolation remains durable. Then we tackle the “quiet drivers” of trial results: monitoring intensity, the 30-second recurrence rule, blanking periods, and AF burden—the design choices that can make technologies look better (or worse) without changing biology. Finally, two practical, real-world segments: ablation in patients with pacemakers/ICDs (MAUDE signal patterns, including resets and generator issues) and pacing-induced cardiomyopathy (PICM) in the leadless era (leadless vs transvenous RV pacing). Full written issue (with references) is on Substack: epedge.substack.com and on LinkedIn Newsletter EP Edge Journal Watch

    25 min
  7. EP Edge™ Journal Watch (Special Edition): Feb 2026 HRS/EHRA Pulsed Field Ablation (PFA) Scientific Statement — Vote Counts, Safety Signals, and Real-World Workflow

    19 FEB

    EP Edge™ Journal Watch (Special Edition): Feb 2026 HRS/EHRA Pulsed Field Ablation (PFA) Scientific Statement — Vote Counts, Safety Signals, and Real-World Workflow

    In this EP Edge™ Journal Watch Special Edition, we unpack the newly released 2026 HRS/EHRA Scientific Statement on Pulsed Field Ablation (PFA) and translate “consensus language” into practical, lab-ready decision-making. This isn’t a surface summary—it’s a critical appraisal of how the statement was built (including the 11-voter model), where the field is truly aligned, and where recommendations may outpace either the evidence base or global clinical reality.  final pfa statement You’ll hear a Consensus Map that separates high-agreement anchors (e.g., access, anticoagulation, sheath discipline) from moderate-consensus workflow preferences (e.g., anesthesia models, ICE use, waiting periods), and the genuinely controversial areas. Then we go deep on what matters most to operators and patients: platform-aware safety and post-market signal management, hemolysis/AKI mitigation tied to lesion burden, phrenic/airway realities, esophageal considerations when lesion sets expand, CIED interaction risk, and why “PFA is a system, not a single technology” should change how you read every recommendation.  final pfa statement Show notes: All graphics and full references are available on epedge.substack.com and on LinkedIn in the EP Edge™ Journal Watch newsletter (Issue 12 Special Edition). Questions/suggestions: email: epedgecast@gmail.com

    17 min
  8. EP Edge Journal Watch Issue 11 February 2026: Varipulse Safety Signal, ElectroPulse PFA, Farapoint CTI Ablation, Leadless Pacemaker Infection & EP Occupational Hazards

    16 FEB

    EP Edge Journal Watch Issue 11 February 2026: Varipulse Safety Signal, ElectroPulse PFA, Farapoint CTI Ablation, Leadless Pacemaker Infection & EP Occupational Hazards

    In this episode of EP Edge Journal Watch, we review several developments that directly impact modern electrophysiology practice — from pulsed field ablation safety to operator health. We begin with the real-world Varipulse experience, where early neurovascular events dropped dramatically after workflow modification and reduction of lesion stacking, highlighting that PFA success depends as much on procedural execution as on device design. We then discuss the first-in-human ElectroPulse mapping-ablation platform and what its early durability signals suggest about integrated catheter systems and standardized ablation protocols.  We next turn to right-sided ablation safety. The episode examines cavotricuspid isthmus pulsed field ablation, the mechanism of coronary vasospasm, and the high-dose nitroglycerin protection strategy used in studies. We also review emerging intracoronary imaging findings suggesting possible delayed coronary arterial remodeling after PFA. Device and structural therapy updates follow, including Amulet 360 left atrial appendage occlusion sealing performance and long-term outcomes of a small-diameter ICD lead platform designed to improve lead durability.  Finally, we discuss practical EP laboratory implications: a simplified pacing maneuver to distinguish AV nodal from septal accessory pathway conduction, the first reported infection involving an atrial leadless pacemaker, and new data on occupational hazards in electrophysiology — including radiation exposure, cataracts, orthopedic injury, and pregnancy-related workforce considerations. The central message is clear: electrophysiology outcomes increasingly depend on workflow discipline, protection strategies, and operator sustainability.  Full references, figures, and detailed graphics are available in the LinkedIn Newsletter: EP Edge Journal Watch — Issue 11 (February 2026) and on Substack at epedge.substack.com. Questions or feedback: epedgecast@gmail.com.

    13 min

About

Welcome to EP Edge Journal Watch — where cardiac electrophysiology meets evidence, precision, and perspective. Hosted by Dr. Niraj Sharma, this bi-weekly podcast distills high-impact cardiovascular and EP research into clear, clinically meaningful insights. Each episode goes beyond headlines and abstracts to uncover what new studies actually mean for patient care, decision-making, and the future of electrophysiology. What EP Edge Journal Watch stands for: Evidence-based practice Precision electrophysiology A forward-thinking, edge-driven approach to how we interpret and apply data in real-world clinical settings. Whether you’re an electrophysiologist, cardiologist, researcher, trainee, or allied health professional, EP Edge Journal Watch brings you the signal — not the noise. Expect sharp summaries, thoughtful commentary, and practical takeaways designed for the busy clinician who wants to stay ahead of the curve

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