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A Prospective, Multi-center, Randomized Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Detection of Atrial Fibrillation Using Artificial Intelligence-Enhanced Electrocardiography (SmartECG-AFrisk) Compared With Usual Care in Patients With Suspected Atrial Fibrillation: DEEP-AF
Sponsor: Yonsei University
Summary
"The DEEP-AF study is a prospective, multi-center, randomized clinical trial evaluating the effectiveness of an artificial intelligence-enhanced electrocardiography algorithm (SmartECG-AFrisk) for early detection of atrial fibrillation (AF) in adults with suspected AF but no prior diagnosis. A total of 1,230 participants will be enrolled across 13 centers in Korea and randomized 1:1 into standard care or AI-guided care arms. In the standard care arm, diagnostic evaluation follows clinical guidelines with symptom-based use of 12-lead ECG, Holter, or patch ECG. In the AI-guided arm, baseline 12-lead ECGs are analyzed using SmartECG-AFrisk to calculate an AF risk score. Participants are classified as high-risk (score ≥50) or low-risk (\<50), and monitoring strategies are determined accordingly, enabling targeted ECG monitoring for high-risk individuals. The primary objective is to compare the 6-month incidence of newly diagnosed AF between the two arms. Secondary endpoints include AF detection differences between risk groups, healthcare resource utilization per AF diagnosis, anticoagulation initiation rates, major clinical events (stroke, embolism, bleeding, mortality), and patient satisfaction. This study aims to demonstrate whether integrating AI-driven ECG risk stratification into routine care improves AF detection and optimizes healthcare resource use in real-world clinical practice.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
30 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
1230
Start Date
2025-11
Completion Date
2027-11-30
Last Updated
2025-09-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Usual Care (General Practice)
Participants receive routine care based on current clinical guidelines. Symptom-driven evaluation is performed by physicians, including at least one diagnostic test within 6 months such as a standard 12-lead ECG, Holter monitoring, or patch ECG. The choice and frequency of monitoring are determined by physician discretion, reflecting real-world practice patterns.
AI-ECG Guided Care (SmartECG-AFrisk)
Participants undergo SmartECG-AFrisk analysis of baseline 12-lead ECGs recorded in sinus rhythm. The algorithm calculates an atrial fibrillation risk score, classifying participants as high-risk (score ≥50) or low-risk (\<50). Monitoring strategies are adapted accordingly: high-risk participants undergo targeted and potentially repeated ECG monitoring using 12-lead ECG, Holter, or patch ECG, while low-risk participants follow standard guideline-based care.
Locations (1)
Yonsei University College of Medicine
Seoul, South Korea