Long-term Cardiac Monitoring After Cryptogenic Stroke (CMACS)



Status:Archived
Conditions:Neurology
Therapuetic Areas:Neurology
Healthy:No
Age Range:Any
Updated:7/1/2011
Start Date:September 2009
End Date:June 2012

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Long-term Cardiac Monitoring After Cryptogenic Stroke (CMACS): A Pilot Randomized Trial


Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a common and treatable cause of ischemic stroke, but it can be
paroxysmal and asymptomatic, and therefore difficult to detect. Patients with stroke
routinely undergo 24 hours of continuous cardiac telemetry during hospitalization for stroke
as a means of excluding AF. Small studies indicate that extending the duration of monitoring
with portable outpatient telemetry devices detects more cases of AF. However, these studies
are small and lack control groups, and cannot demonstrate that prolonged cardiac monitoring
detects more cases of AF than routine clinical follow-up. The investigators therefore
propose a pilot study to determine the feasibility of randomizing patients to prolonged
cardiac monitoring or routine clinical follow-up. The investigators will enroll 40
consecutive adult patients seen at the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF)
Neurovascular service with cryptogenic stroke or high-risk TIA (ABCD2 score 4 or greater).
Enrolled patients will be randomized in a 1:1 fashion. Group A will be assigned to wear an
ambulatory cardiac event monitor for 21 days. Group B will be discharged home without a
monitor and will serve as controls during routine clinical follow-up. The investigators'
primary outcome will be feasibility, defined as more than 80% of randomized patients
completing full clinical follow-up and more than 70% of cardiac monitoring if applicable.
The investigators' secondary outcomes will be diagnoses of AF at 90 days and 1 year and
diagnoses of recurrent stroke at 1 year.



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