Boston Scientific has initiated the AVANT GUARD clinical trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Farapulse pulsed field ablation (PFA) system as a first-line treatment for persistent atrial fibrillation (AF), the only trial to study the use of PFA as frontline therapy in patients with this form of AF.
Outcomes of ablation with the Farapulse PFA Systema nonthermal treatment in which electric fields selectively ablate heart tissuewill be compared to outcomes following use of anti-arrhythmic drug (AAD) therapy, which is commonly prescribed for patients living with persistent AF.
Unlike paroxysmal AF, which describes symptoms that last for seven days or fewer, persistent AF is a sustained arrhythmia that lasts for more than a week. Early treatment of persistent AF can reduce the risk of blood clots, stroke, and heart failure, and may prevent the disease from becoming permanent. Patients are often treated with AADs as frontline therapy for heart rhythm maintenance, though some can experience adverse effects and limited efficacy. Cardiac ablation is a potential alternative interventional strategy for those living with persistent AF.
“With nearly 40,000 patients treated to date in clinical and commercial settings, the Farapulse PFA system continues to demonstrate a promising safety and effectiveness profile, upon which this study seeks to build,” said Brad Sutton, chief medical officer, AF Solutions, Boston Scientific. “The AVANT GUARD trial is exciting in that it has the potential to change clinical practice by advancing the therapy to be utilised as an earlier treatment for persistent AF, which may lead to better long-term outcomes and establish the FARAPULSE PFA system as the preferred method for treating the disease.”
The randomised AVANT GUARD trial will enrol more than 500 patients diagnosed with persistent AF at up to 75 sites globally. Patients in the study will be randomised to undergo pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) and left atrial posterior wall ablation using the Farapulse PFA system, or receive AAD treatment, and followed for three years. The trial will evaluate the outcomes of therapy provided with the Farapulse PFA system versus AADs, including device-or procedure-related adverse events, the rates of freedom from AF, atrial flutter, or atrial tachycardia, as well as AF burdena measurement of the amount of AF an individual experiences.
All patients in the trial will also be inserted with the Boston Scientific LUX-Dx insertable cardiac monitor. This device simplifies the monitoring process for patients by automatically capturing and transmitting arrhythmia episode data, and is designed to detect recurrence of cardiac arrhythmias and assess AF burden by providing continuous rhythm monitoring.
Last week, the Cleveland Clinic enrolled the first patient in the AVANT GUARD trial, overseen by Oussama Wazni, vice chair of cardiovascular medicine and section head, Cardiac Electrophysiology and Pacing, who is also serving as the lead investigator of the trial.
Last year, clinical trial data presented demonstrated the Farapulse PFA system is non-inferior to standard-of-care therapies for the treatment of paroxysmal AF, with superior efficiency, while additional real-world data from more than 17,000 patients demonstrated continued real-world safety, efficacy and efficiency of the system.
Boston Scientific also completed enrolment in the first phase of the ADVANTAGE AF clinical trial in the third quarter of 2023, which is studying the system for the treatment of patients with drug refractory symptomatic persistent AF, and commenced enrolment in an extension arm of the study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of adjunctive use of the Farapoint PFA catheter for cavotricuspid isthmus (CTI) ablations, a procedure used to treat atrial flutter.
The company now anticipates US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of the Farapulse PFA system in the first quarter of 2024.