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Clinical Trial Summary

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common rhythm disturbance of the heart. It can affect people of any age but usually happens as we get older. It can cause palpitations, breathlessness, lethargy, and fainting attacks. It is also associated with an increased risk of strokes. The best treatment for it at the moment involves burning or freezing (ablation) the heart muscle in a part of the heart called the left atrium. The ablation injures the heart muscle around the so-called pulmonary veins and the procedure is called a 'pulmonary vein isolation'. This procedure work in about 60% of people. The study team have found that there are nerve endings in the heart that also cause AF and have shown that ablating these nerve endings also prevents AF. These Nerve endings are known as ganglionated plexuses (GPs). The study team would now like to perform a trial in people who still have AF after the usual pulmonary vein procedure. The study team hope that ablating the nerve endings that cause AF (GPs), we will stop their AF coming back. The study team will compare this procedure to the normal approach of doing the pulmonary vein isolation again


Clinical Trial Description

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common heart rhythm disturbance and causes physical discomfort and strokes. The the best long-term treatment of AF is catheter ablation in a part of the heart called the left atrium and works in about 60-70% of patients. The study team have discovered that that there are nerve endings in the heart that cause AF (GP sites). The study team have previously treated patients with AF by ablating these nerve endings (GP ablation) in a part of the heart called the left atrium. The study team have treated patients with AF by ablation of these nerve ending in the left atrium. The treatment worked in a similar number of people to the standard treatment but caused less heart injury than the standard treatment There are similar nerve endings in another part of the heart called the right atrium. The study team want to find out if ablating these nerve endings in the right atrium can help people for whom the standard treatment in the left atrium has not worked. STUDY PROTOCOL: The study will run at at one hospital (Hammersmith Hospital). The study team will look at the information on patients who have been placed on the waiting list for an AF ablation. The study team will approach patients who have previously had an ablation and coming back for another procedure. Patients will be given information about the study and discuss the issues with the research team. Patients who decide to participate will be allocated an anonymised number and their information included on a research database and will be encrypted for use only by the research team. Patients in the study will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment pathways. All patients will then continue with their standard NHS treatment to prepare them for the procedure. All patients will have all the steps of the ablation done in the same way, including the repeat pulmonary vein isolation procedure which they have been advised to have by their own doctor. The group of patients allocated to receive right sided ablation to treat the nerve endings procedure will have this done in addition to the repeat pulmonary vein isolation. The study team will aim to recruit 116 patients to the study. All patients will stop any heart rhythm medication prior to the procedure. A 48 hour heart rhythm monitor will be obtained prior to patients' procedure. The study team will also ask patients to complete a survey to assess their quality of life. All patients will have their procedures under general anaesthesia. An ultrasound from inside the oesophagus will be used to exclude blood clot in the heart. Access to the heart will be through the veins in the leg and transeptal puncture to get into the left atrium. All patients will first undergo a repeat pulmonary vein isolation. 3D mapping software will be used to identify the pulmonary veins and then these will be isolated from the rest of the heart by using radiofrequency energy to burn the tissue which connects these areas to the rest of the heart. This will be the end of the procedure for those patients receiving standard treatment. The patients allocated to right atrial GP ablation will then have map of the right atrium created and the sites which contains the nerves supplying the heart identified. These will be found using high-frequency electrical stimulation delivered by a custom-built stimulator that has been shown to be comparable to the existing technology. When the sites of these nerves are found, they will be marked on the map of the right atrium and then they will undergo ablation with radiofrequency energy till they are no longer detectable. If the patient is not in a normal rhythm before or during the procedure, then they may require an electric shock to return them to normal. The procedures in each arm will take between 2hrs and 3hrs to perform Follow Up: All heart rhythm medication patient used to take before ablation will be continued during the 3 months after procedure, except for amiodarone. After 3 months, patients will stop all heart rhythm medication if they are well and free of symptoms or AF. At 3, 6, 9, 12 months following patients' procedures, 48hour heart monitors will be fitted or implanted devices will be reviewed, to assess if any atrial fibrillation has happened. The Quality of life survey will be repeated at 6 and 12 months after the ablation. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05539040
Study type Interventional
Source Imperial College London
Contact Jamie Kay, MBBS BMedSci
Phone 02033131000
Email jamie.kay@imperial.ac.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 21, 2023
Completion date December 2, 2027

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