Canadian WATCHMAN Registry is a multicentre (8 Centres) Canadian prospective, non-randomized, registry to enrol 100 consecutive patients undergoing LAA closure with the WATCHAN device to study the safety and effectiveness of the WATCHMAN device
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia with current prevalence estimated at 1.5-2% of the general population. AF is a major cause of stroke, responsible for 15% of all strokes and 30% of strokes in patients age \>80. Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability and is the 4th leading cause of death in the US. Anticoagulation is the mainstay therapy for preventing strokes in AF with a 64% relative stroke reduction and 26% relative mortality benefit with warfarin therapy. Warfarin or newer anticoagulation treatments (NOAC) have been associated with increased risk of major bleeding and therefore a significant proportion (30-50%) of eligible patients do not receive therapy due to perceived risk of bleeding. The need for newer therapy is therefore required and percutaneous left atrial appendage closure (LAAC) devices have been investigated for patients with high risk of stroke and contra-indication to long term oral anticoagulation therapy. The WATCHMAN device is one of the leading LAA closure devices and with the most world-wide clinical experience. The investigators are running a multicentre (8 Centres) Canadian prospective, non-randomized, registry to enrol 100 consecutive patients undergoing LAA closure with the WATCHAN device to study the safety and effectiveness of the WATCHMAN device.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Vancouver General Hospital
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
RECRUITINGMajor Adverse Events
Composite: Cardiovascular death (or unexplained death), device embolization, stroke, systemic embolism, myocardial infarction, cardiac tamponade, major bleeding, and the need for cardiovascular surgery
Time frame: From up to 24 Months from procedure
Long-term Events
Composite: Overall mortality, cardiovascular mortality, ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, systemic embolization, late device embolization (beyond hospitalization)
Time frame: From hospital discharge to 24 Months
Procedural Technical Success
Procedure duration and complications
Time frame: Procedural (up to the end of procedure)
Procedural complications
Stroke (ischemic and hemorrhagic), air embolism, pericardial effusion (minor - not requiring intervention; serious - requiring percutaneous or surgical drainage), cardiac perforation, device embolization, major or life-threatening/disabling bleeding
Time frame: Procedural (up to hospital discharge)
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