Heart Rate and Rhythm Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
DiME Study: Comparison of Diltiazem and Metoprolol in the Management of Acute Atrial Fibrillation or Atrial Flutter With Rapid Ventricular Response: A Prospective Randomized and Double-Blinded Non-Inferiority Trial of Safety and Efficacy
Acute atrial fibrillation is the most common sustained, clinically significant dysrhythmia
encountered in the emergency department (ED) and the most common dysrhythmia treated by
emergency physicians. Atrial flutter is less common than atrial fibrillation but its
management in the ED is very similar, and the majority of patients with atrial flutter also
have atrial fibrillation. Symptomatic relief and ventricular rate control are generally the
primary therapeutic objectives in the ED management of acute atrial fibrillation and flutter
(AFF). The need for swift, appropriate action by the emergency physician is highlighted by
the fact that up to 18% of patients with AFF develop potentially life-threatening
complications such as congestive heart failure, hypotension, ventricular ectopy, respiratory
failure, angina and myocardial infarction.
Both beta-blocking agents and calcium channel blockers are commonly used to treat AFF in the
ED. Metoprolol is the most commonly used beta-blocker; and diltiazem is the most frequently
used calcium channel antagonist.[8] Diltiazem was released by the FDA for treatment of AFF
in 1992. Shreck et al. were the first to demonstrate both the efficacy of diltiazem in the
ED management of AFF with rapid rate and its clear superiority over the previously most
commonly used pharmacologic agent, digoxin.
To date, only one prospective, randomized trial has compared the effectiveness of a calcium
channel blocker (diltiazem) with a beta-blocker (metoprolol) for rate control of AFF in the
ED. Despite the relatively small sample size (n=20 in each group) the authors concluded that
both pharmacologic agents were similarly effective. In order to test this finding, the
investigators conducted a prospective comparison of metoprolol and diltiazem for the
management of patients presenting to the ED with AFF with rapid ventricular rate.
We conducted a prospective, randomized, double-blind study to compare the effectiveness of
intravenous metoprolol with that of diltiazem in achieving rate control in adult ED patients
with rapid atrial fibrillation or flutter. Approval of the study was obtained from our
hospital's institutional review board. All enrolled patients provided written informed
consent and HIPAA authorization documentation.
This study was set in the adult ED of Maimonides Medical Center, an urban teaching hospital
in Brooklyn, NY with an annual ED census of more than 120,00 patients. A convenience sample
of adult patients age 18 or older presenting with a supraventricular tachydysrhythmia were
evaluated for enrollment. Eligible patients had to have a 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG)
showing atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter with a ventricular rate of greater than or
equal to 120 beats per minute. Data collected included demographics, medical history, vital
signs and electrocardiogram findings. All patients were immediately evaluated by the
treating physician utilizing ACLS protocols. At the discretion of the treating physician,
intravenous adenosine was administered in order to facilitate identification of the
underlying supraventricular tachydysrhythmia. All patients were attached to a monitor that
displays cardiac rhythm, heart rate, blood pressure and oxygen saturation.
Upon enrollment, patients were randomly assigned, in a 1:1 ratio, to receive diltiazem
administered parenterally at a dose of 0.25 mg/kg (to a maximum dose of 30 mg) or metoprolol
administered at a dose of 0.15 mg/kg (to a maximum dose of 10 mg). Randomization was
performed through the use of a computer-generated randomization list. Pharmacy released the
study drug in a locked tackle box coded in number sequence to correspond to that of the
computer-generated randomization list, upon which the pharmacist also prepared the study
drug in blinded fashion. The study medications were packaged in identical-appearing
dispensing kits. Patients who were randomly assigned to diltiazem received a bolus injection
in a syringe that appeared identical to that of metoprolol. Admixture and labeling were
performed by the pharmacist in the ED and dispensed to the treating nurse for
administration. Doses of each study medication were adjusted with normal saline to a total
of 10 ml in each syringe to prevent un-blinding. The time at which the first dose was
administered was denoted as time zero (baseline). If the primary endpoint was not achieved
at time 15 minutes, then a second escalation dose was administered. If the patient had been
enrolled in the diltiazem group, the escalation dose was 0.35 mg/kg (to a maximum dose of 30
mg), and for patients enrolled in the metoprolol group, the escalation dose was 0.25 mg/kg
(to a maximum dose of 10 mg). As with the initial dose, the escalation dose was prepared by
the pharmacist and given to the treating nurse for patient administration in a blinded
fashion.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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