Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Atrial Fibrillation and Congestive Heart Failure (AF-CHF)Trial
Heart failure is a clinical syndrome where the heart is unable to pump enough blood to satisfy the organism's metabolic needs. Heart failure has become a major clinical and public health problem with approximately 300,000 Canadians being affected. Atrial fibrillation is a rhythm disorder in which the upper chambers of the heart (the atria) are paralyzed by continuous electrical activity. Some of the continuous chaotic electrical activity in the atria travels to the lower cavities of the heart (the ventricles) causing then to beat irregularly and very rapidly. It is the most frequent cardiac arrhythmia, affecting 5% of individuals 65 years and older and it is associated with an increased risk of stroke. Both conditions (heart failure and atrial fibrillation) often co-exist in the same patient. Heart failure promotes atrial fibrillation and atrial fibrillation aggravates heart failure. The Atrial Fibrillation and Congestive Heart Failure (AF-CHF) trial is investigating whether preservation of normal cardiac rhythm influences mortality and morbidity. The AF-CHF study began in 2001 and 1,378 patients have been enrolled from 123 participating centres, in North America, South America, Europe, and Israel. The results of this trial which are expected in October 2007, will improve decision-making for the physician and will provide useful information to healthcare organizations responsible for the care of heart failure patients.
Congestive heart failure (CHF) and atrial fibrillation (AF) are two important and growing
problems in medicine and cardiology. Both conditions often co-exist and complicate each
other's management. Two therapeutic strategies are available for patients with AF and CHF:
the first aims at restoring and maintaining sinus rhythm, whereas, the second focuses
exclusively on optimizing ventricular rate. The primary objective of the Atrial Fibrillation
and Congestive Heart Failure (AF-CHF) trial is to compare these two widely-used treatment
strategies with respect to cardiovascular mortality.
Hypothesis: Restoring and maintaining sinus rhythm reduces cardiovascular mortality compared
to a rate control treatment strategy in patients with AF and CHF.
Rationale: Despite new therapeutic interventions, the prognosis of heart failure patients
remains grim with 5-year survival rates usually less than 50%. In most recent, large CHF
trials, AF has been reported to be independently associated with increased mortality.
Non-randomized observations also suggest that patients with AF in the setting of CHF have a
greater tendency to revert to sinus rhythm during amiodarone therapy or with newer class III
antiarrhythmic agents and that those who maintain a normal rhythm have a better prognosis.
There is a need to determine whether a treatment strategy that attempts to maintain sinus
rhythm will have a beneficial impact on cardiovascular mortality in CHF patients. This
hypothesis has never been tested in a prospective, controlled, adequately-powered randomized
trial.
Research Plan: AF-CHF is a prospective, multicentre clinical trial (100 centres in Canada,
the USA, and Europe), that will randomize 1,450 NYHA class II-IV CHF patients with left
ventricular ejection fraction >/=35% (NYHA class I patients with prior hospitalization for
CHF or ejection fraction </=25% are also eligible) and a history of significant AF (ECG
documentation of either one episode lasting >/=6 hours within the past 6 months, or an
episode lasting >/=10 minutes within the past 6 months in a patient with prior electrical
cardioversion for AF) to one of two treatment strategies: 1) rhythm control with the use of
electrical cardioversion if needed combined with antiarrhythmic drug therapy (amiodarone or
other class III agents), and additional non-pharmacologic therapy in resistant patients, 2)
rate control with the use of drugs (mainly beta-blockers plus digoxin) and/or pacemaker and
AV nodal catheter ablation if necessary. The enrollment period will be completed within 2
years with a minimum follow-up of 2 years. Both groups will receive optimal CHF management
with ACE inhibitors and beta-blockers. Cardiovascular mortality will be the primary endpoint
of the trial. The intention-to-treat approach will be the primary method of analysis.
Secondary outcomes are total mortality, hospitalization, stroke, cost of therapy and quality
of life. From recent trial data, we anticipate a 18.75% 2-year cardiovascular mortality in
the rate control arm and a 25% reduction in cardiovascular mortality in the rhythm control
group. Assuming a 2% loss to follow-up, a two-sided alpha level of 0.05 and an annual
accrual rate of 750 patients, we calculate that 722 patients per group (rounded total number
of 1,450 patients) will be necessary to achieve a power of 0.80 when performing a log-rank
test. The Research Centre of the Montreal Heart Institute will be the Coordinating and
Methods Centre.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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