Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Value of add-on Arrhythmia Surgery in Patients With Paroxysmal or Persistent Atrial Fibrillation Undergoing Valvular or Coronary Bypass Surgery. A Randomised Comparison on Quality of Life, Cost-effectiveness, Morbidity and Rhythm Outcome.
The hypothesis being studied is that add-on arrhythmia surgery in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) undergoing valvular or coronary surgery improves quality of life, is cost-effective, reduces perioperative and long-term morbidity associated with AF.
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is connected with an increased morbidity and mortality. In
addition, quality of life is diminished due to palpitations, dyspnea, dizziness and syncope.
AF is frequently associated with valvular and coronary disease. In the AF patients
undergoing valvular or coronary surgery the arrhythmia almost always relapses. For symptom
control anti-arrhythmic drugs and cardioversion are used but breakthrough arrhythmias and
side effects of the drugs happen frequently. For more effective symptom control "add-on"
arrhythmia surgery is being advocated. However, at present we do not know whether add-on
arrhythmia surgery indeed affects morbidity and quality of life. In this respect the benefit
of chronic sinus rhythm has to outweigh the risks of a prolonged operation. In addition,
cardiovascular complaints unrelated to AF may persist even after successful operation, thus
offsetting the benefit of chronic sinus rhythm. Add-on surgery is more costly than standard
surgery but this may compare favourably with shorter hospital admission due to less frequent
post-operative AF.
Valvular heart disease is frequently associated with ventricular remodelling: a decreased
ventricular function and atrial dilatation. AF itself may worsen heart failure due to a
tachycardiomyopathy. Elimination of AF might therefore enhance recovery from structural and
functional remodelling and promote recovery of quality of life after the operation.
The PIAF, RACE and AFFIRM have shown that chronic sinus rhythm is not necessarily associated
with a reduced morbidity or enhanced quality of life. PIAF however showed that exercise
tolerance was better when rhythm control was achieved. Further analyses of RACE and AFFIRM
are pending. One drawback of the above studies is the fact that chronic sinus rhythm is
difficult to obtain. In PIAF, RACE and AFFIRM only 30 to 50% was in sinus rhythm at the end
of follow-up. By contrast, arrhythmia surgery is a highly effective treatment in this
respect.
Forty patients underwent a (phase 1-study) coronary bypass- or valve surgery with add-on
arrhythmia surgery in the same way as in this protocol proposed. This means epicardial on
beating heart and without use of the heart-lung machine. In the last follow-up 80 % of the
patients not longer were in atrial fibrillation. With similar treatment procedures, but more
invasive, so on the arrested heart and endo cardially, success percentages reported varying
from 60 % till 80%.
This large variance in success rate is probably related to the primary course of the disease
and the degree of the morphological abnormality. In spite of these meaningful results
''add-on'' arrhythmia surgery is no general accepted treatment. The intended patient
population remains generally untreated. Historical data of patients from the university
hospital of Maastricht show that no add on treatment has a success rate of 25% of patients
in sinus rhythm.
Considering the above a randomised comparison of add-on arrhythmia surgery and standard
surgery is warranted.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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