Long Standing Persistent Atrial Fibrillation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Long-term Outcomes in Long Standing Persistent Atrial Fibrillation Following Catheter Or Thoracoscopic Surgical Ablation : Extended Follow-Up Of CASA-AF Randomised Controlled Trial
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a condition detected as an irregular heartbeat. It is the most common rhythm disturbance worldwide which can lead to significant symptoms and serious health problems (stroke and heart failure). The longer a person has AF, the more difficult it is to restore a normal heart rhythm. Those with continuous AF for longer than a year are described as having longstanding persistent AF (LSPAF). This is the most challenging type of AF to treat and medications are often not effective. Apart from medications patients with LSPAF may be offered a medical procedure to help improve their symptoms. It involves putting a flexible thin tube (catheter) into a blood vessel in the groin and up into the heart to destroy the tissue causing irregular heart beat. This procedure has modest success in improving symptoms in the long term. Recently, keyhole surgery has been used for these patients and evidence shows that it is better than the catheter procedure. However, we do not know how well people are doing beyond one year. Feedback from a patient focus group suggested that knowing the long-term results of these two procedures is important to help them make an informed choice when it comes to treatment. In this study we propose to continue monitoring patients from a randomised clinical trial (CASA AF RCT) who have already had one of the procedures. They have a small heartbeat monitor implanted under the skin with a battery life of around 3 years. We will be able to look at their heart rhythm data for the duration of this period and detect the return of the fibrillation if it happens.
This study involves participants from the randomised clinical trial which was just completed (CASA AF RCT: NCT02755688; ISRCTN18250790 ). They have undergone relevant ablation procedures in a randomised fashion and completed 12 months follow up. At the last study visit they signed a consent form to confirm that they have agreed to keep implanted loop recorder for the duration of its battery life time (approximately 3 years). They have also continued to regularly transfer data from their implanted loop recorder to the secure server where it is regularly reviewed. This group of patients is now a unique cohort whose follow up data is invaluable for additional research. For this study we will ask for their written consent and apart from analysing their heart rhythm data we will arrange two hospital visits with some additional tests and completion of questionnaires. The principal objective of the study is to compare the long-term effectiveness of thoracoscopic surgical ablation and percutaneous catheter ablation, the two procedures available for treatment of atrial fibrillation in patients with longstanding persistent AF (LSPAF). There is some evidence that thoracoscopic surgical ablation may be better than catheter ablation in keeping the patients in regular heart rhythm after a single procedure without use of antiarrhythmic drugs in short term. In this study we plan to monitor patients who have undergone these procedures for 3 years. Our secondary objectives are focussing on patients who had more than one procedure and/or may be using medications in order to maintain regular heart rhythm during 36 months follow up. We will therefore look at: 1. the effectiveness of a single procedure (catheter or surgical) in maintaining normal rhythm with use of antiarrhythmic drugs. 2. the effectiveness of multiple ablative procedures in maintaining sinus rhythm with and without use of antiarrhythmic drugs. 3. the proportion of patients who are still in AF but the time they spend in it is reduced by ≥75%. We will also want to examine: 4. patient reported change in quality of life from baseline to 24 and 36 months after ablative treatment. 5. changes in levels of serum biomarkers from baseline to 36 months and how they relate to the freedom of arrhythmia 6. health and social care resource use and associated costs from baseline to 36 months 7. the cost-effectiveness of thoracoscopic surgical ablation compared with catheter ablation and update the health economic model developed for the main study (CASA AF RCT). Our sample size calculations show that with an expected rate of attrition of around 20% we need 94-100 study participants to show the difference in the effectiveness of the two procedure with power of 80%, p= 0.05. Patients participating in this extended follow-up study will attend two hospital appointments to coincide with 24 and 36 months post-ablation (± 6 months). These two visits will consist of: 1. clinical examination 2. review of concurrent medications and comorbidities 3. electrocardiogram (12 lead ECG ) 4. blood test for routine biochemistry and collection of a sample for biomarkers analyses 5. completion of questionnaires to assess patients' quality of life: atrial fibrillation effect on quality of life (AFEQT), EuroQol (EQ5D5L) European Heart Rhythm Association score of atrial fibrillation (EHRA), 6. Health economic questionnaire to capture repeat procedures (ablation, direct current cardioversion and AF-related emergency care) For the duration of the extended follow-up, once a week patients will download data from their implantable loop recorders which have algorithms that are specific for atrial arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation, atrial tachycardia, atrial flutter). Patients remotely download their data to the Medtronic (MyCarelinkTM) secure server. These data will be reviewed centrally every month by a dedicated Research Fellow. Patients will be contacted monthly by telephone to ensure compliance and to discuss any rhythm abnormalities detected in these data that require review of treatment/ management. Patients will be able to contact the research team if they experience symptoms of atrial arrhythmias. The implanted loop recorder data can be interrogated remotely, and appropriate advice regarding treatment given based on data review. ;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Completed |
NCT05037136 -
Remote Monitoring of AF Recurrence Using mHealth Technology
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