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Effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial

FUNDING ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Type of funding sources: None. INTRODUCTION: Electrical cardioversion (DCCV) is a long-used and proven method for the acute termination of atrial fibrillation episodes. The methodology for optimal performance of DCCV with the highest level of effectiveness while maintaining...

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Autores principales: Jiravsky, O, Rucki, L, Spacek, R, Szmek, B, Ranic, I, Hrosova, M, Neuwirth, R, Hudec, M, Sknouril, L, Chovancik, J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10207064/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/europace/euad122.074
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author Jiravsky, O
Rucki, L
Spacek, R
Szmek, B
Ranic, I
Hrosova, M
Neuwirth, R
Hudec, M
Sknouril, L
Chovancik, J
author_facet Jiravsky, O
Rucki, L
Spacek, R
Szmek, B
Ranic, I
Hrosova, M
Neuwirth, R
Hudec, M
Sknouril, L
Chovancik, J
author_sort Jiravsky, O
collection PubMed
description FUNDING ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Type of funding sources: None. INTRODUCTION: Electrical cardioversion (DCCV) is a long-used and proven method for the acute termination of atrial fibrillation episodes. The methodology for optimal performance of DCCV with the highest level of effectiveness while maintaining maximum safety is still under investigation. To validate our proposed methodology for performing DCCV, we have initiated the PROTOCOLENERGY clinical trial, which is currently ongoing. OBJECTIVE: To test the effect of conducting a clinical trial on the effectiveness of cardioversion in patients who were not included in the study for any reason. METHODOLOGY: A retrospective analysis of the DCCV registry from the indications of persistent atrial fibrillation (long-term persistent excluded) from 2015-8/2022. Statistical comparison of the demographics and overall effectiveness of the DCCV cohort before and after study initiation and comparison of the cohort, enrolled and not enrolled since study initiation (no interim analysis of the study cohort proper). Heart rate 1 min after the last discharge is assessed. COHORT: A total of 2402 procedures were analyzed in 829 women (34.5%) and 1573 men (65.5%) aged 67 (+/-10) years, with CHADSVASC score of 3,0 (+/− 1), BMI 31.2 (+/-7.7). RESULTS: DCCV efficiency in the whole cohort was 91.1%. Before the study, SR was achieved in 90% of the 1981 patients; since the start of the clinical trial, DCCV efficacy increased to 96.4% (in a cohort of 421 patients) (p <0.001). There was no statistically significant effect in efficacy between patients included in the clinical trial (312 pt.) and those not included (109 pt.) (96.5% vs. 96.3% p=0.944). CONCLUSION: The presented data suggest an effect of developing and controlling the methodology of DCCV performance in a clinical trial on increasing the efficacy of DCCV, even in the cohort of patients not enrolled in the clinical trial. That phenomenon is called the HAWTHORNE effect and is related to the improvement of the outcome of the investigated phenomenon due to the influence of the actual investigation. In this case, probably due to strict adherence to the study protocol ( paddle pressure during DCCV, cardioversion in expiration, adherence to predetermined cardioversion energies, etc. even in patients not included in the study). [Figure: see text]
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spelling pubmed-102070642023-05-25 Effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial Jiravsky, O Rucki, L Spacek, R Szmek, B Ranic, I Hrosova, M Neuwirth, R Hudec, M Sknouril, L Chovancik, J Europace 10.4.3 - Rhythm Control, Cardioversion FUNDING ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Type of funding sources: None. INTRODUCTION: Electrical cardioversion (DCCV) is a long-used and proven method for the acute termination of atrial fibrillation episodes. The methodology for optimal performance of DCCV with the highest level of effectiveness while maintaining maximum safety is still under investigation. To validate our proposed methodology for performing DCCV, we have initiated the PROTOCOLENERGY clinical trial, which is currently ongoing. OBJECTIVE: To test the effect of conducting a clinical trial on the effectiveness of cardioversion in patients who were not included in the study for any reason. METHODOLOGY: A retrospective analysis of the DCCV registry from the indications of persistent atrial fibrillation (long-term persistent excluded) from 2015-8/2022. Statistical comparison of the demographics and overall effectiveness of the DCCV cohort before and after study initiation and comparison of the cohort, enrolled and not enrolled since study initiation (no interim analysis of the study cohort proper). Heart rate 1 min after the last discharge is assessed. COHORT: A total of 2402 procedures were analyzed in 829 women (34.5%) and 1573 men (65.5%) aged 67 (+/-10) years, with CHADSVASC score of 3,0 (+/− 1), BMI 31.2 (+/-7.7). RESULTS: DCCV efficiency in the whole cohort was 91.1%. Before the study, SR was achieved in 90% of the 1981 patients; since the start of the clinical trial, DCCV efficacy increased to 96.4% (in a cohort of 421 patients) (p <0.001). There was no statistically significant effect in efficacy between patients included in the clinical trial (312 pt.) and those not included (109 pt.) (96.5% vs. 96.3% p=0.944). CONCLUSION: The presented data suggest an effect of developing and controlling the methodology of DCCV performance in a clinical trial on increasing the efficacy of DCCV, even in the cohort of patients not enrolled in the clinical trial. That phenomenon is called the HAWTHORNE effect and is related to the improvement of the outcome of the investigated phenomenon due to the influence of the actual investigation. In this case, probably due to strict adherence to the study protocol ( paddle pressure during DCCV, cardioversion in expiration, adherence to predetermined cardioversion energies, etc. even in patients not included in the study). [Figure: see text] Oxford University Press 2023-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10207064/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/europace/euad122.074 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle 10.4.3 - Rhythm Control, Cardioversion
Jiravsky, O
Rucki, L
Spacek, R
Szmek, B
Ranic, I
Hrosova, M
Neuwirth, R
Hudec, M
Sknouril, L
Chovancik, J
Effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial
title Effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial
title_full Effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial
title_fullStr Effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial
title_short Effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial
title_sort effectiveness of electrical cardioversion for persistent atrial fibrillation in the ongoing protocolenergy: hawthorne effect trial
topic 10.4.3 - Rhythm Control, Cardioversion
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10207064/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/europace/euad122.074
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