Comparison of Devices for Atrial Septal Defects Closure: A Pilot Study
- Conditions
- Atrial Septal Defect
- Interventions
- Device: Occlutech Figulla Flex II®Device: AMPLATZER™ Septal Occluder.Device: GORE® CARDIOFORM ASD Occluder
- Registration Number
- NCT04291898
- Lead Sponsor
- University Health Network, Toronto
- Brief Summary
This is a proposal, for the first time in Canada, to examine the comparative effectiveness of three commercially available devices (ASO, FSO, and GAO/GSO) for transcatheter closure of atrial septal defects (ASD) in adults using a pilot randomized controlled trial.
- Detailed Description
The most widely used transcatheter device for ASD closure is the the Amplatzer Septal Occluder (ASO). Two other devices that entered the Canadian market are the Gore Cardioform ASD occluder (GAO) and the Figulla Flexible II Occlutech (FSO) device. There exists a paucity of data on the comparative efficacy and safety of these devices. This is a proposal, for the first time in Canada, to examine the comparative effectiveness of three commercially available ASD devices in an internal pilot randomized trial.
Approximately 60 patients referred for transcatheter ASD closure will be recruited in this study over a period of 15 months from 4 participating centers across Canada. This will be a registry-based randomized controlled trial (RRCT) where patients will be enrolled into one of three arms (ASO, FSO, and GAO/GSO) to compare the effectiveness and safety outcomes of three different ASD closure devices.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 60
- ≥18 years old referred for percutaneous (secundum) ASD closure with right atrial and ventricular enlargement; and
- clinically significant left-to-tight shunt (Qp:Qs≥1.5:1), or
- evidence of paradoxical embolism (with a TEE defect >10mm),
- written informed consent
- TEE/CCT/CMR defect diameter >30mm,
- rim sizes of < 5 mm to the coronary sinus, inferior vena cava rim, an atrioventricular valve, or the right upper pulmonary vein,
- multiple defects,
- complex congenital heart disease requiring surgical repair within 3 years of device placement,
- Eisenmenger-syndrome,
- recent myocardial infarction PCI/CABG < 6 weeks,
- demonstrated intra cardiac thrombi on echocardiography (especially LA or LAA thrombi), or atrial tumor
- known occluded bilateral femoral veins/IVC,
- pulmonary artery systolic pressure more than half the systemic systolic arterial pressure
- recent pelvic venous thrombosis
- serious comorbidity with life expectancy <3 years (e.g., non-skin cancers not in remission, advanced renal failure serum creatinine >160 umol/L)
- patients whose size or condition would cause the patient to be a poor candidate choice for cardiac catheterization (e.g., too small for echocardiographic imaging probe, catheter size, vascular size, active infection, body weight < 8 kg)
- serious infection in < 6 weeks producing bacteremia (e.g. sepsis), active endocarditis, or any other infection that cannot be treated successfully prior to device implantation (patient must have negative blood cultures off antibiotics for 1 week prior to procedure),
- active GI bleed < 6 weeks,
- bleeding disorder, untreated ulcer, or any other contraindications to aspirin therapy, unless another antiplatelet agent can be administered for 6 months
- previous stroke in the past 12 months,
- documented chronic atrial fibrillation or >2 episodes of documented paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in the last 12 months,
- pregnancy or breastfeeding, plan to become pregnant within the next 6 months, not using an effective method of birth control in premenopausal women,
- documented nickel/titanium allergy, or intolerance to contrast agents.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Device: FSO Occlutech Figulla Flex II® Participants implanted with the Occlutech Figulla Flex II® (FSO). Device: ASO AMPLATZER™ Septal Occluder. Participants implanted with the AMPLATZER™ Septal Occluder (ASO) Device: GSO/GAO GORE® CARDIOFORM ASD Occluder Participants implanted with the GORE® CARDIOFORM ASD Occluder (GSO/GAO)
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Composite outcome of 'Clinical atrial fibrillation (AF)' or 'Major adverse cerebro-cardiovascular events (MACCE) 24 weeks At 24 weeks where clinical (AF) includes AF-related, ECG-documented, ED visit/hospitalization/physician visit, cardioversion, ablation or pacemaker implantation or new antiarrhythmic or AF anticoagulant prescription'; MACCE includes 'new onset heart failure (HF), HF-related ED admission, myocardial infarction, stroke, re-intervention, or death.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Subclinical AF (SCAF) burden (number of episodes): 14 days Number of episodes with \>6 min of AF detected on CardioSTAT monitor during 14 days
Subclinical AF (SCAF) burden (total time): 14 days Total time in AF during 14 days
Subclinical AF (SCAF) burden (percent time): 14 days Percent time in AF during 14 days
Procedural effectiveness outcomes (acute technical success rate at discharge) Discharge, 24 weeks Successful deployment and retention without major device related complications, stroke, myocardial infarction (MI) or arrhythmia requiring antiarrhythmic drug or cardioversion
Patient-reported outcomes (QoL): Baseline, 6 weeks, 24 weeks Quality of life (QoL) using the EuroQoL (EQ-5D-5L™) at baseline, 6 weeks, 24 weeks
Subclinical AF (SCAF) burden (days): 14 days Days with \>6 min of AF detected on CardioSTAT monitor during 14 days
Patient-reported outcomes (HeartQOL): Baseline, 6 weeks, 24 weeks Quality of life (QoL) using the HeartQOL questionnaire at baseline, 6 weeks, 24 weeks
Procedural effectiveness outcomes (successful closure rate at discharge): Discharge, 24 weeks Negative bubble study or residual shunt \<2mm
Patient-reported outcomes (healthcare utilization): Baseline, 6 weeks, 24 weeks Healthcare utilization (ED admission, physician visit, etc) at 6 and 24 weeks
Patient-reported outcomes (SF-12): Baseline, 6 weeks, 24 weeks Quality of life (QoL) using the SF-12 questionnaire at baseline, 6 weeks, 24 weeks
Patient-reported outcomes (satisfaction with device): 24 weeks Satisfaction with the use of CardioSTAT and KardiaMobile devices using a Likert scale at 24 weeks
Trial Locations
- Locations (4)
Institut Universitaire de Cardiologie Et Pneumologie de Quebec/Hopital Laval
🇨🇦Québec, Quebec, Canada
St. Paul's Hospital
🇨🇦Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Institut de Cardiologie de Montreal (MHI)
🇨🇦Montréal, Quebec, Canada
Toronto General Hospital
🇨🇦Toronto, Ontario, Canada