Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Atrial fibrillation is common and increases the risk of stroke. Traditionally patients are treated with blood thinning medications or at the time of surgery the part of the heart where blood clots form is cut out. Surgically cutting out the left atrial appendage can be difficult and complications can occur. An alternative strategy is to create a tunnel to increase blood flow and wash out the part of the heart where clots form.
This strategy has not been previously studied. The purpose of this study is to determine if creating a tunnel to increase blood flow is feasible and safe.
Full description
The goal is to understand the potential avenues to increase Left Atrial Appendage (LAA) flow in patients with Atrial Fibrillation (AF) to minimize systemic embolization risk. Flow modeling demonstrates that the anatomy of the LAA results in decreased velocities in the LAA apex. Introduction of a 3-4mm shunt in the apex can result in increased velocity, less stasis and a lower propensity for thrombus formation. Small (<8mm) inter-chamber shunts can exist in humans with no long term hemodynamic consequences in otherwise structurally normal hearts - making a strategy of pulmonary artery (PA) to LAA shunt an attractive potential therapy given anatomic proximity and gradient differential between the cardiac chambers.
This will be a 5 patient first-in-human feasibility study. The population will include patients undergoing CABG or other cardiovascular surgery with AF and a CHADS2 score >1 in whom the treating team deems traditional therapy with anticoagulants is prohibitive or ineffective (dialysis or EGFR preoperatively <15, previous bleeding with non-reversible pathology, clinically deemed contraindicated to oral anticoagulant). The intervention will be PA-LAA shunt creation at the time of surgery. As this is a single arm study there will be no comparison group.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Age ≥ 18 years undergoing CV surgery
History of AF with a CHADS2 score >1
Relative contraindication to OAC as determined by the heart team
Anatomic proximity of LAA and PA on preoperative CT scan suitable for shunt creation
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal