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Not Yet RecruitingNCT04823299

Randomized Controlled Trial- Ablation Strategy for Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation - Trigger and Substrate Guided Wide Area Radiofrequency Ablation Compared to Pulsed Field Ablation Pulmonary Vein Isolation

AWARE-2 - Randomized Controlled Trial Ablation Strategy for Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation - Trigger and Substrate Guided Wide Area Radiofrequency Ablation Compared to Pulsed Field Ablation Pulmonary Vein Isolation

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
556 (estimated)
Sponsor
Ottawa Heart Institute Research Corporation · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Atrial Fibrillation (AF) is a heart rhythm disturbance that affects over a million people in North America. AF can cause strokes, heart failure, poor quality of life and may lead to premature death. Catheter ablation has been shown to be superior to medications for symptoms, prevention of stroke and heart failure. AF recurrence is a problem after catheter ablation. Our research has found that in most cases AF recurrence occurs because the catheter procedure was ineffective. The objective of our clinical trial is to find out if a new method of performing the catheter procedure will be more effective in preventing AF recurrence compared to the current standard of care ablation procedure. Subjects will be randomly allocated to undergo either the standard of care ablation, or the novel patient tailored ablation. The novel method aims to understand the unique factors responsible for AF in each individual and uses this information to perform a patient-tailored catheter ablation procedure. This is expected to improve the results of AF ablation. The effectiveness and safety of the ablation procedure will be specifically evaluated in women to understand the effect of sex on AF ablation.

Detailed description

Catheter ablation (CA) for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF) is beset by the significant limitation of recurrent AF in one third of subjects. Subjects with recurrence of AF usually require repeat ablation procedures with the attendant risk of potentially serious complications and significant costs to the health care system. We hypothesize that an innovative, a patient specific precise CA strategy will significantly reduce AF recurrence. This study will determine whether a precise, patient specific ablation strategy (tailored to the patient's triggers and substrate) combining electrophysiological (EPS) testing guided radiofrequency catheter ablation (RFA) for pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) using the wide-area circumferential (WACA) technique along with non-pulmonary vein trigger (NPVT) and low-voltage area (LVA) ablation will improve freedom from recurrent atrial fibrillation (AF) when compared to PVI alone strategy using cryoballoon ablation (CAB). The PVI-WACA technique has a 'ceiling effect' due to PV reconnection, especially along the posterior wall of the LA as shown in an observational study investigating the pattern of PV reconnection from our institution. Further attempts at improving durable PVI rates with higher energy ablation may not be possible due to concerns regarding esophageal injury and development of atrio-esophageal fistula. It may be possible to improve the results of CA for paroxysmal AF by targeting NPVT and LVA that are not usually targeted during CA using the PVI-WACA only strategy. This trial is a single-blinded (subjects blinded), prospective, parallel arm RCT. Subjects satisfying the inclusion and exclusion criteria will be randomized (1:1) to either the control arm (cryoballoon ablation) or the experimental arm (RF based WACA ± electrophysiological testing guided ablation of non-PV triggers of AF and low voltage area ablation). Randomization will be conducted after informed consent has been obtained and before catheter ablation. The first 60 days after catheter ablation will be considered a "blanking-period" and atrial tachyarrhythmias (AF, Atrial Flutter \[AFl\] or Atrial Tachycardia \[AT\]) occurring during this period will be documented. However, these will not be considered treatment failures. Subject accrual will occur over a 36-month period and each subject will have a minimum follow-up period of 24 months, with a total trial duration of 60-months. Subjects will be followed up at 2,6,12,18 and 24 months after ablation, with an implantable loop recorder (ILR) interrogation. Quality of life questionnaires (EQ-5D, AFEQT questionnaires and CCS-SAF scale) will be administered at baseline,12-months and 24 months post ablation visit. A tool to assist in decision making will be administered to subjects during the consent process.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURECryoballoon ablationCryoballoon pulmonary vein isolation ablation
PROCEDURERadiofrequency catheter ablation +EPS guided trigger and substrate ablationRF based WACA ± electrophysiological testing guided ablation of non-PV triggers of AF and low voltage area ablation

Timeline

Start date
2025-08-01
Primary completion
2028-09-01
Completion
2029-02-01
First posted
2021-03-30
Last updated
2025-08-19

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04823299. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.