Study purpose and design

The STOP AF First trial1,2 is a prospective, multicenter, randomized study evaluating whether Arctic Front™ cryoballoon ablation is superior to antiarrhythmic drug (AAD) therapy as a first-line rhythm control treatment in patients with symptomatic paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (PAF).

A total of 225 drug-naïve patients (AAD for less than 7 days) with symptomatic PAF aged 18–80 were enrolled at 24 centers in the United States. The Arctic Front Advance™ cryoballoon was used to establish pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) and the drug therapy arm received a class I or III AAD therapy.


Key findings

Effective

Greater than 7 out of 10 patients were free from atrial arrhythmia recurrence with cryoablation


versus


Less than 5 out of 10 patients with AAD therapy


74.6% freedom from acute procedural failure or atrial arrhythmia recurrence 12 months post-ablation.

By modified intention-to-treat analysis (which included all randomized patients who initiated therapy), freedom from primary efficacy failure was:

74.6% in the cryoballoon arm, 45.0% in the AAD arm (p < 0.001)


Safe

Less than 2% serious complication rate




Low complication rate. Primary safety events occurred in two subjects (estimated 12-month rate: 1.9%, 95% CI: 0.5–7.5%) in the cryoballoon arm. Since the upper bound of the 95% confidence interval was below the prespecified performance goal, the primary safety endpoint was met.



Quality-of-life outcomes

A significant improvement (p < 0.01) in subjects’ quality of life was observed at 12 months for those in the ablation group as assessed with the AFEQT and EQ-5D questionnaires. Improvements in atrial fibrillation-specific quality of life at 12 months assessed using the AFEQT were larger with Arctic Front™ cryoballoon ablation versus AAD therapy.


Meta-analysis

A meta-analysis of three randomized controlled trials demonstrates cryoballoon ablation, compared to AADs, as an initial first-line therapy is associated with incremental benefits, including:

  • 39% relative reduction in the risk of atrial arrhythmia recurrence3
  • 8.32 points larger improvement in AFEQT score on average3
  • 29% relative reduction in healthcare utilization3
  • 62% relative reduction in hospitalization3

No significant difference in the rate of serious adverse events.



Watch the scientific exchange video.

Learn more about the impact of Arctic Front™ cryoballoon ablation as initial treatment for atrial fibrillation featuring a discussion on a state-of-the-art review and meta-analysis demonstrating incremental benefits of Arctic Front™ cryoablation compared to AADs.

  • Jason Andrade, M.D.
  • Hugh Calkins, M.D.
  • Andrea Russo, M.D.
  • Jaret Tyler, M.D.

Log in to Medtronic Academy to view the video.


Endpoint definitions

Primary efficacy endpoint

Treatment success at 12 months

Treatment failure is defined as:

  • Acute procedural failure
  • Any subsequent AF surgery or ablation in the left atrium (including those performed during the blanking period)
  • Any of the following after the 90-day blanking period:
    • Documented AF/AT/AFL
    • Cardioversion
    • Class I or III AAD use

Primary safety endpoint

Composite of prespecified procedure- and system-related serious adverse events evaluated in the cryoballoon catheter ablation arm (prespecified performance goal: failure rate less than 12%)

Primary safety events include:

  • Within 7 days:
    • Transient ischemic attack
    • Stroke
    • Major bleeding
    • Myocardial infarction
    • Vascular complication
  • Within 30 days:
    • Significant pericardial effusion
  • Within 12 months:
    • Symptomatic pulmonary vein stenosis
    • Atrial-esophageal fistula
    • Unresolved phrenic nerve injury at 12 months

Study population

Key inclusion criteria

  • A diagnosis of symptomatic PAF with the following documentation: 
    • Physician’s note indicating recurrent self-terminating AF or PAF
    • Any ECG-documented AF within 6 months prior to enrollment
  • Age 18–80

Key exclusion criteria

  • History of AF treatment with class I or III AAD, including sotalol, with the intention to prevent an AF recurrence. However, patients pretreated with above AAD for less than 7 days with the intention to convert an AF episode were allowed.
  • Prior left atrial ablation or left atrial surgical procedure
  • Prior persistent AF (continuous AF greater than 7 days)
  • Left atrial diameter greater than 5.0 cm
  • NYHA class III or IV congestive heart failure and/or known left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) less than 45%

Study recurrence monitoring


  Baseline 1 month 3 months 6 months 12 months
Patient-activated ambulatory ECG (TTM; weekly and when symptomatic)    
12-lead ECG
24-hour continuous ambulatory ECG      

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