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This concerns a multi-center, single-arm, diagnostic accuracy study. In this study, a wristband that monitors heart rythm is assessed in clinical and free living conditions. The performance of the wristband in detecting atrial fibrillation and normal sinus rhythms will be compared to a short 12-lead ECG or 24-hour holter. To ensure that both patients with and without atrial fibrillation are included whilst limiting the burden on patients and hospital staff, four groups of patients are being recruited: * Group A: patients receiving an ECG holter at the outpatient clinic for 24-48 hours of remote monitoring * Group B: patients diagnosed with (paroxysmal) AF presenting to the clinic for routine follow-up evaluation. * Group C: patients diagnosed with (paroxysmal) AF registered in a patient organisation for patients with AF. * Group D: patients receiving a 12-lead ECG at the outpatient clinic as standard of care. The secondary outcomes of the study focus on assessing the primary outcomes in light of demographic subgroups, patient physical activity and the signal quality index.
Rationale: Wearables have the potential to monitor patients remotely. The Corsano CardioWatch 287-2 is such a medical device that can monitor atrial fibrillation. The device has been validated using clinical trials in hospitals, but evaluation in the intended remote setting across various demographic groups is lacking. Primary objective: To compare episodes of atrial fibrillation across 30-second intervals detected by the Corsano CardioWatch 287-2 with episodes of atrial fibrillation detected by conventional Holter monitoring across 24-48 hours or short in-clinic 12-lead ECG based on the positive predictive value, negative predictive value, sensitivity and specificity. Secondary objective: To compare the number of atrial fibrillation episodes greater than 6 minutes, 1 hour, 6 hours, and 12 hours duration detected by the CardioWatch 287-2 and with the number of these specific episodes detected by conventional Holter across 24-48 hours days. As well as to assess primary outcomes in light of demographic subgroups, patient activity and the signal quality index. Study population: One group (A) receiving an ECG monitoring holter for the duration of 24-48 hours days as part of standard care for atrial fibrillation screening. Besides, one group (B) diagnosed with (paroxysmal) without indication for holter monitoring according to standard of care AF presenting to the clinic for routine follow-up evaluation. Adding, one group (C) diagnosed with (paroxysmal) and registered in a patient organisation for patients with AF. Finally, one group (D) receiving in-clinic 12-lead ECG monitoring as part of standard of care. Study design: This concerns a multi-center, single-arm, diagnostic accuracy study. Four different groups of patients will be approached for participation in the trial: * Group A: patients receiving an ECG holter at the outpatient clinic for 24-48 hours of remote monitoring * Group B: patients diagnosed with (paroxysmal) AF presenting to the clinic for routine follow-up evaluation. * Group C: patients diagnosed with (paroxysmal) AF registered in a patient organisation for patients with AF. * Group D: patients receiving a 12-lead ECG at the outpatient clinic as standard of care. Groups A, B and C will receive ECG holter monitoring as well as continuous monitoring by the Corsano CardioWatch 287-2 across 24-48 hours to assess whether the amount and duration of AF episodes detected by the investigational device correspond to the gold standard. Detection of atrial fibrillation with the Corsano CardioWatch 287-2 is done by optical photoplethysmography (PPG), after which atrial fibrillation can be confirmed with a 30-second ECG measurement. Additionally, all participants will be asked to perform 10 single-lead ECG's at standard timepoints (approx. every 2 hours when awake) across the 24-48 hours as well as additional ECG measurements in case of AF (at least 30 minutes between alerts). Group B was added to ensure that a considerable amount of the included data includes periods with atrial fibrillation. As the results of a prior study (RECAMO study NL NL83281.000.22) show that the amount of patients in Group A with periods of atrial fibrillation is limited (7.0%). Furthermore, Group C was added to limit the additional workload for hospital staff and ensure inclusion of a diverse patient population from different demographic and ethnical groups. For this group two (virtual) visits will be scheduled before and after the study period to detect any alarming signals before participation in the study and to share and explain the results after study completion. Finally, group D, a group receiving a short in-clinic 12-lead ECG as standard of care was added to ensure the inclusion of a broad and sizable demographic group whilst keeping the burden on the patient and hospital staff limited.
Age
22 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Reinier de Graaf Gasthuis
Delft, South Holland, Netherlands
Start Date
May 1, 2025
Primary Completion Date
January 1, 2026
Completion Date
January 1, 2026
Last Updated
May 2, 2025
350
ESTIMATED participants
Corsano CardioWatch 287-2
DEVICE
Lead Sponsor
Corsano Health B.V.
NCT06935591
NCT07430007
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT07272902