Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
BEAT AF is a randomized controlled trial aiming to assess the efficacy and the safety of pulsed field energy in persistent AF ablation
Full description
Atrial fibrillation (AF), the most common arrhythmia, accounts for 1/3rd of Cardiovascular expenses, with over 10 millions affected in Europe. In addition to significant impact on quality of life, AF exposes patients to stroke, heart failure, dementia and death. AF is the most commonly ablated arrhythmia. The Pulmonary Vein Isolation (PVI) is the cornerstone of AF ablation, preventing recurrences, especially in patients with persistent AF. Catheter ablation of AF uses either radiofrequency (RF) or cryothermal (cryo) energy. Common to these thermal energy sources is their reliance on time-dependent conductive heating/cooling and the fact that these modalities ablate all tissue types indiscriminately. The ablation procedure remains long, requires skills and expertise, and has a limited success rate, mostly because of non-durable lesions after PVI implying frequent redo procedures. And these energies are associated with rare but severe complications due to their thermal nature. The goal of BEAT AF is to disrupt AF ablation by achieving durable PVI with permanent, coalescent and transmural ablation lesions using Pulsed Electric Field (PEF) energy. PEF is non-thermal and creates nanoscale pores in cell membranes. Cardiac cells are highly sensitive to PEF unlike phrenic and oesophageal cells. BEAT AF aims to allow assessing preliminary evidence of efficacy and safety of pulsed field energy in persistent AF ablation. For this purpose, a randomized clinical trial will be conducted to provide large clinical data of PEF of 1-year recurrence for persistent AF. The BEAT AF consortium gathers 9 European renowned clinical centres (France, Czech Republic, Germany, Austria, Belgium) to contribute to decrease the huge burden of AF.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patients with drug-resistant symptomatic persistent AF meeting all the following criteria:
Patients who are ≥ 18 and ≤ 75 years of age on the day of enrollment.
Patient who are willing and capable of:
Highly effective contraception for women of childbearing potential.
Effective oral anticoagulation >3 weeks prior to planned ablation procedure
Patient affiliated to or beneficiary of national health security scheme for French participants.
Exclusion criteria
AF that is any of the following:
Paroxysmal AF by diagnosis or that terminates spontaneously within 7 days of onset
Secondary to electrolyte imbalance, thyroid disease, alcohol or other reversible / non-cardiac causes 2. Any of the following atrial conditions:
a. Sustained ventricular tachycardia or any ventricular fibrillation b. Hemodynamically significant valvular disease: i. Valvular disease that is symptomatic ii. Valvular disease causing or exacerbating congestive heart failure iii. Aortic stenosis: if already characterized, valve area < 1.5cm or gradient > 20 mm Hg iv. Mitral stenosis: if already characterized, valve area < 1.5cm or gradient > 5 mm Hg v. Aortic or mitral regurgitation associated with abnormal LV function or hemodynamic measurements c. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy d. Any prosthetic heart valve, ring or repair including balloon aortic valvuloplasty e. Pacemaker, implantable cardioverter defibrillator or cardiac resynchronization therapy devices f. Any inferior vena cava (IVC) filter, known inability to obtain vascular access or other contraindication to femoral access g. History of rheumatic fever h. History of congenital heart disease with any residual anatomic or conduction abnormality 4. Any of the following procedures, implants or conditions:
a. At baseline: i. New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class III/IV ii. Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) < 40% iii. Symptomatic hypotension iv. Uncontrolled hypertension (SBP > 160 mmHg or DBP > 95 mmHg on two BP measurements at baseline assessment) v. Symptomatic resting bradycardia vi. Implantable loop recorder or insertable cardiac monitor, b. Within the 3 months preceding the Consent Date: i. Myocardial infarction ii. Unstable angina iii. Percutaneous coronary intervention iv. Heart failure hospitalization v. Pericarditis or symptomatic pericardial effusion vi. Gastrointestinal bleeding c. Within the 6 months preceding the Consent Date: i. Heart surgery ii. Stroke, TIA or intracranial bleeding iii. Any thromboembolic event iv. Carotid stenting or endarterectomy 5. Diagnosed disorder of blood clotting or bleeding diathesis 6. Contraindication to, or unwillingness to use, systemic anticoagulation 7. Contraindication to both CT and MRI 8. Sensitivity to contrast media not controllable by premedication 9. Women who are pregnant, lactating, or who are planning to become pregnant during the anticipated study period 10. Medical conditions that would prevent participation in the study, interfere with assessment or therapy, significantly raise the risk of study participation, or modify outcome data or its interpretation, including but not limited to:
i. Other uncontrolled medical conditions that may modify device effect or increase risk, including uncontrolled diabetes mellitus (HgbA1c > 8.0% if test result already obtained), untreated obstructive sleep apnea or active alcohol abuse j. Predicted life expectancy less than one (1) year 11. Clinically significant psychological condition that in the Investigator's opinion would prohibit the subject's ability to meet the protocol requirements/ Patient under legal protection 12. Current or anticipated enrollment in any other clinical study. 13. Employees / family members of:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
83 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Nicolas Derval, MD; Pierre Jais, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal