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Head-to-head Comparison of Single Versus Dual Antiplatelet Treatment Strategy After Percutaneous Left Atrial Appendage Closure: a Multicenter, Randomized Study (ARMYDA-AMULET)

U

University Hospital Maggiore della Carità of Novara

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 3

Conditions

Left Atrial Appendage Occlusion
Antiplatelet Therapy

Treatments

Drug: Aspirin 100mg
Drug: Aspirin 100 mg OD plus clopidogrel 75 mg OD

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT05554822
2021-000730-34

Details and patient eligibility

About

The study will perform a randomized, head-to-head comparison between SAPT (aspirin) and DAPT (aspirin plus clopidogrel) after percutaneous LAA closure with implantation of the Amulet device (AbbottTM, Abbott Park, Illinois, US) in patients with AF. Primary outcome measure will be a net composite endpoint at 6 months including all-cause death, DRT, clinically relevant bleeding complications and ischemic events. The SAPT arm will receive aspirin alone up to 6 months, while the DAPT arm will receive DAPT for 3 months and then aspirin alone. Thus, between 3- and 6-month follow-up both groups will be given aspirin alone.

Full description

State of the art There is no clear evidence on optimal antiplatelet therapy after percutaneous left atrial appendage (LAA) closure in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). There is a consensus supporting dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) with aspirin plus clopidogrel (without oral anticoagulation) after non-WATCHMAN device implantation. However, the use of DAPT after LAA closure was initially derived from other interventional settings (e.g. the antithrombotic approach used after coronary stenting) and available data essentially derive from observational (and often retrospective), non-randomized, studies. Due to the lack of robust and consolidated evidence, the type and duration of antiplatelet therapy after LAA closure are variable and often guided by the individual convincement of the treating physicians. Patients undergoing LAA closure are generally older and have multiple co-morbidities; thus, in these patients the risk of bleeding events is a major concern and antithrombotic therapy may strongly contribute to such risk. Single-center, observational data have suggested that a strategy with single antiplatelet therapy (SAPT, essentially aspirin, without P2Y12 inhibitor) is associated with similar risk of ischemic cerebral events and device-related thrombosis (DRT) and with a significant reduction of bleeding complications after the intervention with 68% reduction in risk of major bleeding (from 7.0% to 2.3%). However, a recent, retrospective evidence raised concerns regarding the effectiveness of SAPT in preventing DRT in this setting of patients. To date, no randomized study has evaluated whether an approach with SAPT, compared to DAPT, is associated with adequate protection from DRT/ischemic events and with decreased bleeding risk. We will address such issue in a randomized, prospective, multicenter study.

Aim of the study The study will perform a randomized, head-to-head comparison between SAPT (aspirin) and DAPT (aspirin plus clopidogrel) after percutaneous LAA closure with implantation of the Amulet device (AbbottTM, Abbott Park, Illinois, US) in patients with AF. Primary outcome measure will be a net composite endpoint at 6 months including all-cause death, DRT, clinically relevant bleeding complications and ischemic events. The SAPT arm will receive aspirin alone up to 6 months, while the DAPT arm will receive DAPT for 3 months and then aspirin alone. Thus, between 3- and 6-month follow-up both groups will be given aspirin alone. We consider that a 6-month follow-up would be more than enough to detect any possible difference between the two groups.

Primary objective:

To demonstrate that SAPT is not inferior to the current standard antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) after LAA closure regarding the cumulative incidence of the net composite endpoint, including death, thrombotic complications and bleeding events, at 6 months.

Secondary objectives:

Compared to DAPT, SAPT use is associated with a similar incidence of ischemic events and a significantly lower incidence of bleeding complications at 6 months.

Study design The study will be phase IV, prospective, multicenter, with 1:1 randomization, open-label, with parallel groups. Consecutive patients with AF undergoing percutaneous LAA closure with the Amulet device will be enrolled. Patients will be included regardless of the type of AF and of clinical indication for LAA closure. Approximately 15 centers with a consolidated experience in the procedure of percutaneous LAA closure will be included. Enrollment will be competitive; each center will include a maximum number of patients corresponding to the 20% of the global population. After the protocol approval, the high-volume centers (e.g. top implanting centers in Italy) will be asked to participate the study, in addition to the Coordinating Center.

Enrollment

574 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Men or women aged ≥18 years signing a specific informed consent
  • Patients with a planned percutaneous LAA closure;
  • Patients with documented non-valvular AF, irrespective of the type (paroxysmal, permanent, persistent), and CHA2DS2-VASc score ≥2
  • Patients suitable for treatment with aspirin and clopidogrel according to the Summaries of product characteristics (SmPCs);
  • Patients considered unsuitable for long-term oral anticoagulant therapy due to a high bleeding risk. Patients will be judged unsuitable for anticoagulation because of bleeding-prone comorbidities, history of previous bleeding (with or without anticoagulant treatment) or an expected low adherence to therapy.
  • Patient's availability to undergo the follow-up visits scheduled for the study
  • Negative pregnancy testing (if applicable), performed at the time of enrollment.

Exclusion criteria

  • CHADS-VAsc score 0-1
  • Requirement for on-going therapy with clopidogrel at the time of screening evaluation (e.g. current therapy with clopidogrel at the time of the screening evaluation will be an exclusion criterion)
  • Known hypersensitivity to the study drugs (aspirin or clopidogrel)
  • Patients deemed to be unsuitable for at least 6 months antiplatelet therapy (SAPT or DAPT) because of a recent (<1 month) major bleeding event
  • Planned oral anticoagulant therapy after the procedure
  • Moderate to severe mitral stenosis
  • Mechanical heart prosthetic valve
  • Active endocarditis
  • Active bleeding
  • Myocardial infarction or percutaneous coronary intervention <6 months
  • Major surgery within one month
  • Intracranial neoplasm, aneurysm or arterio-venous malformation
  • Platelet count <50,000/μL
  • Recent stroke (<1 month)
  • Fibrinolytic therapy within 10 days
  • Baseline hemoglobin <9 g/dL
  • Pregnant woman
  • Breast-feeding
  • Women unavailable to use contraception during the study period

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

574 participants in 2 patient groups

Single antiplatelet therapy (SAPT)
Experimental group
Description:
Single antiplatelet therapy composed of aspirin 100 mg OD, organized as follows: Aspirin-naïve: aspirin 325 mg will be given 12-24 hours before the procedure and continued after the intervention at the dose of 100 mg OD up to 6-month follow-up. Aspirin-treated: periprocedural aspirin 100 mg OD will be given and continued up to 6-month followup.
Treatment:
Drug: Aspirin 100mg
Double antiplatelet therapy (DAPT)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Double antiplatelet therapy composed of aspirin 100 mg OD plus Clopidogrel 75 mg OD, organized as follows: Aspirin-naïve: aspirin 325 mg will be given 12-24 hours before the procedure and continued after the intervention at the dose of 100 mg OD up to 6-month follow-up. Clopidogrel will be given with a 300 mg loading dose of clopidogrel approximately 12 hours before the procedure and then clopidogrel 75 mg OD will be given from the day of intervention up to 3 months. At 3 months clopidogrel will be stopped. Aspirin-treated: periprocedural aspirin 100 mg OD will be given and continued up to 6-month followup. Clopidogrel will be given with a 300 mg loading dose of clopidogrel approximately 12 hours before the procedure and then clopidogrel 75 mg OD will be given from the day of intervention up to 3 months. At 3 months clopidogrel will be stopped.
Treatment:
Drug: Aspirin 100 mg OD plus clopidogrel 75 mg OD

Trial contacts and locations

19

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Central trial contact

Chiara Ghiglieno, MD; Giuseppe Patti, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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