Rationale and Design of a Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial on the Safety and Efficacy of Flecainide versus Amiodarone in the Cardioversion of Atrial Fibrillation at the Emergency Department in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease (FLECA-ED)

Author:

Tsioufis Panagiotis1ORCID,Tsiachris Dimitris12ORCID,Doundoulakis Ioannis12ORCID,Kordalis Athanasios1,Antoniou Christos-Konstantinos12ORCID,Vlachakis Panayotis K.1ORCID,Theofilis Panagiotis1ORCID,Manta Eleni1,Gatzoulis Konstantinos A.1,Parissis John3,Tsioufis Konstantinos1

Affiliation:

1. First Department of Cardiology, Hippocration General Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11527 Athens, Greece

2. Athens Heart Center, Athens Medical Center, 11526 Athens, Greece

3. Emergency Department, Attikon University Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 12462 Athens, Greece

Abstract

Pharmacologic cardioversion is a well-established alternative to electric cardioversion for hemodynamically stable patients, as it skips the risks associated with anesthesia. A recent network meta-analysis identifies the most effective antiarrhythmics for pharmacologic cardioversion with flecainide exhibiting a more efficacious and safer profile towards faster cardioversion. Moreover, the meta-analysis of class Ic antiarrhythmics revealed an absence of adverse events when used for pharmacologic cardioversion of AF in the ED, including patients with structural heart disease. The primary goals of this clinical trial are to prove the superiority of flecainide over amiodarone in the successful cardioversion of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in the Emergency Department and to prove that the safety of flecainide is non-inferior to amiodarone in patients with coronary artery disease without residual ischemia, and an ejection fraction over 35%. The secondary goals of this study are to prove the superiority of flecainide over amiodarone in the reduction in hospitalizations from the Emergency Department due to atrial fibrillation in the time taken to achieve cardioversion, and in the reduction in the need to conduct electrical cardioversion.

Funder

WINMEDICA

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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