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Atrial Fibrillation (AF) is the most common abnormal heart rhythm(arrhythmia) affecting about one in 40 people in England. Patients with AF often have symptoms ranging from palpitations and breathlessness, and a small number of patients may develop heart failure. The major complication of AF is stroke, and this is effectively treated with blood thinning medications (anticoagulation).
AF symptoms can lead to significant decline in quality of life and can affect patients' ability to work and exercise. There are numerous treatments targeted at maintaining normal rhythm and preventing AF recurrence. These include medications and catheter ablation.
Ablation has been shown to be more effective than medications for the long-term control of AF, but its efficacy is significantly reduced by upstream conditions such as high blood pressure, obesity, diabetes, and poor fitness levels. This results in increased complications, repeat procedures, and increased AF recurrence or patients.
Research currently available has shown that intensive risk factor control with weight loss and increased fitness can reduce AF burden and improve results from ablation. However, achieving these targets outside of a clinical trial have been challenging. Recent data has shown that a new class of drug (Liraglutide) can result in significant weight loss over a 3-month period, and pre-treatment prior to liver transplant has improved results and patient recovery.
The overall aim of this study is to determine if accelerated weight loss by Liraglutide before AF ablation is feasible to base a future trial to inform if this approach improves outcomes and can be safely adopted into routine clinical practice.
Full description
Patients meeting the inclusion criteria waiting for atrial fibrillation (AF) ablation in Queen Elizabeth Hospital of Birmingham will be invited for the study.
The investigators aim to recruit 30 patients who meet eligibility criteria. The study will be delivered by a dedicated research fellow, supported by a team of supervising clinical researchers. The research fellow will be responsible for recruitment, study data collection, and follow up. They will also be supported by clinical research nurses.
Timeline of the study for study participants:
At 1st visit (baseline): this visit will focus on collected baseline data (listed below), education on how to administer liraglutide (weight loss medication), and use the Kardia device
The following steps will be undertaken:
At 2nd visit (13 weeks from baseline): this review time point will collect data after 13 weeks of treatment with Liraglutide
At 3rd visit (13 weeks from AF Ablation):
At 4th visit (26 weeks from AF Ablation):
At 5th visit (39 weeks from AF Ablation):
At 6th visit (52 weeks from AF ablation): in person review and final follow up for the research study
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Inclusion criteria
Patients with symptomatic paroxysmal or persistent Atrial Fibrillation on the waiting list for AF ablation at Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham who
Exclusion criteria
Any one of the followings;
29 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Kyaw Zaw Win, MBBS, MRCP
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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