TREAT-AF: Vagus nerve stimulation reduces AF burden
Click Here to Manage Email Alerts
SAN FRANCISCO — Transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve reduced atrial fibrillation burden compared with a sham procedure, researchers from the TREAT-AF study reported.
At 6 months, the primary outcome of median AF burden was reduced by 85% in patients assigned vagus nerve stimulation (SaluStim, Parasym) compared with those assigned the sham procedure (ratio of medians, 0.15; 95% CI, 0.03-0.65; P = .011), Stavros Stavrakis, MD, PhD, associate professor of medicine in the Heart Rhythm Institute at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, said during a presentation at the Heart Rhythm Society Scientific Sessions.
When the 3-month and 6-month time points were combined, median AF burden was reduced by 75% in the stimulation group compared with the sham group (ratio of medians, 0.25; 95% CI, 0.08-0.77; P = .016), according to the researchers.
Total AF duration at 6 months was lower in the stimulation group (P = .032) and there was a trend toward total AF duration at the combined 3-month and 6-month timepoints favoring the stimulation group (P = .064), Stavrakis said.
“Longest daily AF duration was no different between the two groups, suggesting that vagus nerve stimulation suppressed the initiation but had no effect once the AF episode started,” he said during the presentation.
The stimulation group also had significantly altered frequency domain indices of heart rate variability (P = .003) and a 23% decrease in TNF-alpha (P = .0093) compared with the sham group, Stavrakis said, noting that differences in other inflammatory cytokines were not significant between the groups.
There were no device-related side effects or crossovers reported. Two patients from the sham group and one from the stimulation group died during the study period, none from cardiac causes.
The trial included 53 patients with paroxysmal AF. The stimulation group (mean age, 65 years, 54% women) received low-level transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the auricular branch of the vagus nerve by an ear clip at the tragus (20 Hz, 1 mA below discomfort level) and the sham group (mean age, 68 years; 56% women) used the ear clip on the ear lobe. The patients administered the therapy themselves for 1 hour per day over 6 months after training.
Adherence, defined as missing four or fewer sessions per month, was achieved in 83% of the sham group and 75% of the stimulation group (P = .42), Stavrakis said.
The device was originally developed to treat tinnitus, Stavrakis said.
“Our results support the emerging paradigm of noninvasive neuromodulation to treat AF,” he said during the presentation. “Further studies are required to optimize patient selection and discriminate at baseline between responders and nonresponders in order to maximize the efficacy of this novel noninvasive therapy.” – by Erik Swain
Reference:
Stavrakis S, et al. LBCT01-01. Presented at: Heart Rhythm Society Annual Scientific Sessions; May 8-11, 2019; San Francisco.
Disclosure: Stavrakis reports no relevant financial disclosures.