RecruitingPhase 4NCT05498376

The Leadless AV Versus DDD Pacing Study

The Leadless AV Versus DDD Pacing Study: A Randomized Controlled Single-center Trial on Leadless Versus Conventional Cardiac Dual-chamber Pacing


Sponsor

Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern

Enrollment

100 participants

Start Date

Aug 23, 2022

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Cardiac pacemaker (PM) implantation is the established treatment for relevant bradyarrhythmias. Conventional PMs require 1-3 pacing leads to register the heart's intrinsic activity ("sensing") and to deliver the electrical stimuli to the heart ("pacing"). These leads are responsible for the vast majority of morbidity after implantation and PM failures. Therefore, a leadless PM system (Micra TPS™, Medtronic, United States) has been introduced a few years ago. This system overcomes the limitations of leads, however, the first generation of the Micra TPS™ only allowed sensing and pacing in the right ventricle. More recently, an upgraded version has been introduced and gained market approval (Micra AV, Medtronic, United States). According to published results from several clinical trials, this device allows sensing the atrial activity and, thus, timing the delivery of the ventricular pacing impulse in a physiological manner similar to a conventional dual-chamber PM with two leads. Clinical feasibility and safety for this concept have been established already. However, it is unclear if this translates into a direct clinical benefit for patients in comparison to conventional PM systems. The aim of this trial is to compare the therapeutic efficacy of the Micra AV™ PM and conventional dual-chamber PM systems in patients with intermittent or permanent atrioventricular conduction block and a PM indication according to the latest European guidelines. Thus, patients will be randomized to either a conventional dual-chamber PM implantation or the implantation of a leadless Micra AV™ system. Patients will be stratified for gender (female/male) and a priori estimated physical exercise capacity ("fit"/"unfit"). The primary outcome will be the physical exercise capacity of the patients. The null hypothesis with regards to the primary endpoint is that the leadless pacemaker arm shows an inferior VO2 anaerobic threshold than the conventional pacemaker arm. Hence the alternative hypothesis postulates that the leadless pacemaker arm shows a non-inferior VO2 anaerobic threshold compared to the conventional pacemaker arm. Rejection of the null hypothesis is needed to conclude non-inferiority.


Eligibility

Min Age: 70 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study compares two types of pacemakers — a traditional wired pacemaker (DDD) and a modern wireless leadless pacemaker (Micra AV) — in older adults who need a pacemaker for heart block. You may be eligible if: - You are 70 years old or older - You need a new pacemaker for intermittent or permanent AV heart block - You are eligible for either a conventional or leadless pacemaker - You can give written informed consent You may NOT be eligible if: - You have permanent atrial fibrillation or atrial standstill - You have sinus node disease or need right atrial pacing - Your heart pumping function is reduced and you have permanent high-degree heart block - You have an echocardiography result showing E/A ratio above 1.5 - You also need an implanted defibrillator (ICD) - You are on hemodialysis - You have a mechanical tricuspid valve - You are unable or unwilling to follow the study protocol Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DEVICEConventional pacemaker DDD

Implantation of a conventional cardiac pacemaker

DEVICELeadless pacemaker Micra AV

Implantation of a leadless cardiac pacemaker


Locations(1)

Inselspital, Bern University Hospital

Bern, Switzerland

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NCT05498376


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