Rapid Atrial Fibrillation Treatment Strategy

Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2019
Data have demonstrated that critically ill patients with septic shock who develop atrial fibrillation suffer a greater likelihood of death and other complications when compared with patients who remain in sinus rhythm, however, little evidence exists to inform treatment strategies in this population. Ours is a pilot study evaluating rhythm vs rate control strategies in patients with septic shock and respiratory failure requiring invasive mechanical ventilation who develop new onset atrial fibrillation (NOAF). Design will be prospective, randomized, open‐label. Patients in the rhythm control arm will receive IV amiodarone infusion followed by attempt at electrical cardioversion within 24 hours development of NOAF. Those in the rate control arm will receive negative chronotropic agents (beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, amiodarone, or digoxin) at the discretion of the treating physician. Available patient data will be collected for a total of 180 days following enrollment, and outcomes assessed will include ICU length of stay, ventilator free days, and time on vasopressors
Epistemonikos ID: b90526da4a99278f874aac00d4245f30def425e7
First added on: May 22, 2024