No cause for stroke is found in up to 30% of cases despite extensive investigations. These are called cryptogenic strokes (CS). 1 in 4 stroke survivors will suffer another in 5 years and this is a leading cause of fear and anxiety. A common reason for CS is an undetected heart rhythm disorder called atrial fibrillation (AF). AF occurs intermittently, so it may not be detected during the mandated 24-96 hours of rhythm monitoring that is performed as part of the standard post-stroke investigation strategy. A randomised controlled study in 2014 showed that whereas this standard monitoring strategy picks up AF in 2% of CS patients, longer-term, continuous monitoring for 12 months can pick up AF in 13% of patients. This suggests the standard strategy may miss AF in a proportion of CS patients and thus also the opportunity to mitigate against further strokes with anticoagulation therapy. Prolonged monitoring has traditionally required a minimally-invasive surgical procedure to implant a recording device under the skin at a specialist centre. A specifically trained team is also required to interpret the large number of recordings this strategy yields. The Apple Watch (AW) is a wristwatch able to monitor a wearer's heart rate and rhythm regularity and facilitates real- time, single-lead ECG recordings. This over-the-counter, non-invasive device has demonstrated feasibility and has a Certification (CE) Mark for detecting AF. It may offer a potential non-invasive alternative long-term rhythm surveillance strategy to diagnose AF in these patients. The investigators propose a study in which CS patients will be randomised in a 1:1 ratio to receive additional AW monitoring on top of standard care versus standard care alone. The investigators shall then explore the incidence of AF in the two groups at 1 year and how it impacts clinical outcomes too.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
27
For the duration of the study, participants in the active arm will be asked to make ECG recordings in three circumstances: Routinely once per day from the day of randomisation till the 12-month visit after AF Catheter Ablation (they will be encouraged to do so at the same time each day with the option to set a reminder on the watch). If the AW requests them to do so (the automatic AF-notification algorithm will be active throughout the study period and if AF is suspected based on the tachogram, it will trigger notification for the participant to make an ECG recording). This will be till the 12-month time point. If the patient has symptoms of palpitations, pre-syncope or syncope. This will be till the 12-month time point. Monitoring should continue even if AF has been diagnosed to characterise arrhythmia burden and profile. Participants will be given the contact details of a dedicated email inbox to which to send ECGs recorded through the AW.
St Bartholomew's Hospital
City of London, London, United Kingdom
Whipps Cross University Hospital
London, UK, United Kingdom
Royal London Hospital
London, United Kingdom
The National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery
London, United Kingdom
Atrial fibrillation detection rate
Time frame: 12 months
Incidence of non-elective, hospital admissions.
Time frame: 12 months
Incidence of recurrent stroke or TIA.
Time frame: 12 months
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