Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To compare two standard treatment strategies for atrial fibrillation: ventricular rate control and anticoagulation vs. rhythm control and anticoagulation.
BACKGROUND:
Atrial fibrillation is an extremely common and increasingly prevalent cardiac arrhythmia,
particularly in the elderly, and is an important risk factor for stroke. Management of
atrial fibrillation remains controversial, and although antiarrhythmic drugs are widely used
for this condition, clinical studies to support their use are meager. Management of atrial
fibrillation has at least three components: restoration and maintenance of sinus rhythm;
heart rate control when maintenance of sinus rhythm or when cardioversion is not attempted
or impossible; and anticoagulation. The first component of management uses antiarrhythmic
drugs and the second uses a different group of antiarrhythmic drugs and catheter ablation.
The third is anticoagulant therapy for patients in whom normal sinus rhythm cannot be
maintained or in whom cardioversion is not attempted.
The initiative was developed by staff of the Clinical Trials Branch and the NHLBI Working
Group on Atrial Fibrillation which met in Bethesda in April, 1993. The initiative was given
concept clearance by the February 1994 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Advisory Council. The
Request for Proposals was released in May 1994.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
A randomized multicenter trial. The trial enrolled only patients with atrial fibrillation
who were at high risk for stroke, that is, over 65 years of age or less than 65 and with one
or more other risk factors for stroke such as systemic hypertension, diabetes mellitus,
congestive heart failure, transient ischemic attack, prior cerebral vascular accident. High
risk patients were treated with the anticoagulant warfarin. Cardioversion (electrical or
pharmacologic) might have been attempted before randomization, but if it was unsuccessful,
the patient was excluded from further consideration for randomization. Normal sinus rhythm
must have persisted for one hour or greater after cardioversion to qualify as successful
cardioversion. Patients were randomly assigned to treatment groups which included
maintenance of sinus rhythm or heart rate control. Both treatment groups had two steps.
In the maintenance of sinus rhythm group, the choice of drugs was left to the primary
treating physician, to be chosen from amiodarone, sotalol, propafenone, flecainide,
quinidine, moricizine, disopyramide, procainamide, and combinations of these drugs.
Atrioventricular nodal blocking drugs were also administered unless contraindicated. The
major substudy for AFFIRM randomized initial drug choice among amiodarone, sotalol, and
class I drugs. Prior drugs which were ineffective or poorly tolerated were not repeated.
There were various drug exclusions depending on the patient's condition. Patients in the
maintenance of sinus rhythm group had multiple cardioversions as needed. If there was
treatment failure or intolerance after two or more pharmacologic trials, patients were
considered for innovative therapy in Step II. In Step II, two maintenance doses of
amiodarone were included, a low dose of 100 to 200 mg/day and a normal dose of 300 to 400
mg/day. Each dose of amiodarone was considered to be a single drug trial, so that patients
who received treatment with amiodarone at both dosage levels were considered to have had two
drug trials. It was not mandatory that Step II therapies be applied in any individual
patient. The following innovative Step II therapies were approved for use in the study: (1)
ablation of an atrial focus in patients with type I atrial flutter, if it was clinically
documented that the atrial flutter led to atrial fibrillation; (2) atrial pacing alone, with
or without documented bradycardia; (3) atrial pacing and antiarrhythmic drugs, with either
single site or multiple site atrial pacing; and (4) surgical maze or atrial isolation
procedures at selected centers. Catheter-based ablative procedures, such as those attempting
to mimic the maze procedure were not approved in this study. Implanted atrial cardioverter
defibrillators were also not approved. All therapy was periodically reviewed and subject to
modification by the Steering Committee with concurrence by the DSMB and the NHLBI. In the
event that sinus rhythm was not maintainable by any treatment, patients crossed over to rate
control and anticoagulation.
The heart rate control arm used heart rate as the therapeutic target, rather than dose of
medications. Drug dosage was adjusted to achieve target heart rates. During atrial
fibrillation, heart rate was assessed both at rest and during activity at each clinic visit.
The pharmacologic therapies approved for use in this arm included: beta blockers, verapamil,
diltiazem, digoxin, or combinations of these drugs . When Step I pharmacologic therapies
failed after two or more drug trials, the treating physician could select an approved Step
II innovative therapy. The two innovative therapies approved for use with the heart rate
control arm were: (1) atrioventricular node modification by catheter ablation, with or
without placement of a pacemaker, with or without continued drugs to slow atrioventricular
node conduction, and (2) total atrioventricular junctional ablation and placement of a
pacemaker.
The primary endpoint by which the two strategies were compared was total mortality, analyzed
by intention-to-treat. Secondary endpoints were composite end points (total mortality,
disabling intracranial bleed, stroke, disabling anoxic encephalopathy, cardiac arrest, major
noncentral nervous system bleed, cost of therapy, and quality of life. Follow-up was a
minimum of two years and an average of 3.5 years. Recruitment and intervention extended from
November 1995 through October 1999 with 4,060 patients enrolled by 213 sites.
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Allocation: Randomized, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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