MedPath

Carvedilol for Prevention of Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Atrial Fibrillation
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT01608893
Lead Sponsor
University of Calgary
Brief Summary

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained heart rhythm disorder and is associated with significant symptoms and health problems including an increased risk of stroke and death. Current drug therapies are often ineffective and associated with significant side effects. Abnormalities of calcium regulation in cells may lead to triggers for AF. Emerging data suggest that abnormal intracellular calcium regulation mediated through the ryanodine receptor in heart cells may contribute to AF. Recently the investigators have shown that the β-blocker carvedilol which is most commonly used to treat patients with heart failure, modifies calcium regulation mediated through the ryanodine receptor. At present this drug is not frequently used to treat AF. Therefore the investigators will conduct a randomized trial comparing carvedilol to metoprolol for prevention of paroxysmal AF. This may result in improved health and quality of life for people who suffer AF.

Detailed Description

The study population will consist of patients with electrocardiographically documented symptomatic paroxysmal AF (≥ 2 episodes of ≥ 15 min duration within a six month period) while on stable antiarrhythmic drug therapy. Patients will be excluded if they have AF due to a reversible cause, persistent AF, significant heart failure or a life expectancy of less than one year. Eligible patients will be randomized to carvedilol or metoprolol and followed for 13 months. Randomization will be stratified based on the AF management strategy (rate or rhythm control). Carvedilol and metoprolol will be initiated over a one month drug titration period to achieve doses of 25mg bid and 50 mg bid respectively. AF occurrence will be documented using event recorders. The co-primary outcome measures are survival free from AF after one month blanking period for drug titration and the number of days in AF detected during follow-up. Secondary outcomes include event free survival to first symptomatic episode of AF, days in symptomatic AF, time between first and second episodes of AF, proportion of patients who develop persistent AF, AF Severity Scale, CCS-AF symptom score, ventricular rate during AF, proportion of patients with discontinuation of the assigned therapy and number of emergency department visits or hospitalizations for cardiovascular causes. Adverse effects and need to discontinue carvedilol or metoprolol will be documented. This study will determine whether carvedilol is safe and effective for prevention of recurrent paroxysmal AF in a general population with AF. Data will be analyzed on an intention to treat basis. Three hundred patients will be recruited over 4 years. The sample size is based on an estimated 20% reduction in event free survival from AF (power 0.90, α = 0.05). Patients will be recruited from our AF clinic population which averages 50 new referrals per month and over 2500 referrals since it's' inception in 2005.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
300
Inclusion Criteria
  • Must be in sinus rhythm at enrollment
  • ECG documented symptomatic PAF (> 2 episodes of > 15minutes duration over a 6 month period)
Exclusion Criteria
  • AF due to reversible causes
  • Contraindication or previous significant adverse reaction to Beta blocker therapy
  • Persistent AF
  • NYHA Class II or greater CHF
  • LVEF < or = 35%
  • Life expectancy < 1 year
  • Geographic isolation
  • Unable to give informed consent

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
MetoprololMetoprololThe metoprolol arm patients are stratified by the arrhythmia management strategy Rate or Rhythm control and metoprolol is dose titrated from 25 mg bid to a maximum of 50 mg bid over one month then patients are followed for 6 months.
CarvedilolCarvedilolThe carvedilol arm patients are stratified by the arrhythmia management strategy Rate or Rhythm control and carvedilol is dose titrated from 3.25 mg bid to maximum dose of 25 mg bid over one month then patients are followed for 6 months.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Event-free survival to first detected AF after the one month blanking period for dose titration1 year

Time to first AF detected by event recorder transmission will be determined.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Adverse effects of assigned therapy1 year

Adverse effects thought to be related to drug therapy will be documented as well as number of patients in whom drug is discontined because of adverse events.

number of Emergency room visits/hospitalizations for cardiovascular causes1 year

Subjects will be questioned via telephone interview or clinic visit every 3 months and appropriate hospital recorders retrieved for confirmation of event.

Days in symptomatic AF/Time between successive PAF episodes1 year

The days in which patients report symptomatic AF confirmed by event recorder transmission will be determined and the time interval between successive events will be determined.

AF Severity Scale1 year

Measured via University of Toronto AF Severity Scale at baseline and at end of study or study exit

Ventricular rate during AF1 year

Ventricular rate during AF will be measured from the event recorder tracings - from 10 sec of recording

Proportion of patients who develop persistent AF1 year
CCS AF Symptom Score1 yr

This will be determined from interview at baseline and each follow-up visit. The CCS AF symptom score is a 5 point score from 0 to 4.

CCS-SAF Class Definitions

Class 0 Asymptomatic with respect to AF Class 1 Symptoms attributable to AF have minimal effect on patient's general QOL.

Class 2 Symptoms attributable to AF have a minor effect on patient's general QOL.

Class 3 Symptoms attributable to AF have a moderate effect on patient's general QOL.

Class 4 Symptoms attributable to AF have a severe effect on patient's general QOL.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Calgary

🇨🇦

Calgary, Alberta, Canada

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