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Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06618833

Medical and Sociological Characterization of the Population of Patients Admitted for a First Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation in the Occitanie Ouest Region

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Toulouse · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Atrial fibrillation is the most common arrhythmia with a prevalence of 1 to 4% and constitutes a major health problem both on an individual level (impaired quality of life, heart failure, stroke, hospitalization, excess mortality) and collective level (cost, use of resources). Non-medical determinants influence health, particularly its cardiovascular component, but have been little studied in the context of Atrial fibrillation. The rare studies addressing the subject suggest that they impact the incidence of the disease and the occurrence of its complications. Certain social and sociological characteristics are also associated with less access to the various recognized therapies, whether medicinal or invasive. This is the case for Atrial fibrillation ablation, which has nevertheless demonstrated its usefulness in reducing the Atrial fibrillation burden, in reducing symptoms and hospitalizations and for certain populations (heart failure) a decrease in mortality. Essien et al in a literature review report that non-Caucasian and low-income people have less access to Atrial fibrillation ablation. Non-Caucasian populations are also under-represented in interventional clinical studies on Atrial fibrillation. If the level of education (health literacy), geographic origin (rural vs. urban) and the level of isolation affect the occurrence of Atrial fibrillation and its natural history, including complications, the authors do not mention any specific study that has evaluated their role in access to ablation. A Norwegian national analysis (Olsen) based on data from the health system, therefore exhaustive, evaluated the characteristics of patients suffering from Atrial fibrillation and having benefited from ablation compared to the characteristics of patients treated medically. Patients with the highest levels of education and income are the most likely to be treated by ablation. Women, especially at younger ages, have less access to ablation. The authors also found significant differences between the different territorial subdivisions of the country.

Detailed description

There are therefore arguments highlighting the role of non-medical determinants in the management of Atrial fibrillation by ablation. However, they come from studies from countries (USA, Canada, Norway) whose characteristics may not be universally applicable. The investigator can also question the lack of detail of the data that come from national databases and which lack variables to precisely characterize this population. The investigator therefore wish to carry out an observational study aimed at defining on a medical, sociological, economic and territorial level the population having access to Atrial fibrillation ablation in the Occitanie Ouest population basin (represented by the former Midi-Pyrénées region). The data will come from the only two centers performing this type of intervention, the Pasteur clinic and the Toulouse University Hospital.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCollection of medical dataCollection of medical data focused on the history of atrial fibrillation by the principal investigator
BEHAVIORALCollection of global health elementsCollection of global health elements (physical and mental) by the principal investigator by discussion with the patient
BEHAVIORALPROMIS global questionnaireThe patient completes the global PROMIS questionnaire which collects data on their overall health. The questionnaire consists of 10 questions about the patient\'s overall health, and for each question, the patient has a possible choice of 5 answers varying between different propositions depending on the question: Excellent to poor or Totally to not at all, or Always to never or None to very intense
BEHAVIORALCollection of sociological dataCollection of patient sociological data (territorial, economic, professional, ethnic) by the principal investigator

Timeline

Start date
2024-07-22
Primary completion
2024-12-31
Completion
2024-12-31
First posted
2024-10-01
Last updated
2024-10-01

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06618833. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.