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Atrial fibrillation clinical trials near Saskatoon

2 recruiting trials in the official registry · updated July 2026 · free · no account · no tracking · English & français

Searches within 160 km deliberately include sites across the US border — often a Canadian patient's nearest option.

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Anticoagulation for Stroke Prevention In Patients With Recent Episodes of Atrial Fibrillation Occurring Transiently With Stress

Recruiting nowPhase 4105 sites

Multinational, investigator-initiated study of oral anticoagulation versus no anticoagulation for the prevention of stroke and other adverse cardiovascular events in patients with transient atrial fibrillation occurring transiently with str…

The Fourth Left Atrial Appendage Occlusion Study

Recruiting now140 sites

LAAOS-4 aims to determine if catheter-based endovascular left atrial appendage occlusion prevents ischemic stroke or systemic embolism in participants with atrial fibrillation, who remain at high risk of stroke, despite receiving ongoing tr…

Common questions

How do I find a atrial fibrillation clinical trial near me in Canada?

Use Beacon's free search: enter "atrial fibrillation", your age, and your location, and you'll see recruiting trials sorted by distance, each explained in plain language — including sites just across the US border. Beacon searches the full official registry and never requires an account.

Does joining a clinical trial cost money?

The study treatment and study-related tests are usually provided at no cost, and some trials help with travel. In Canada, your provincial health coverage continues to apply to your routine care — always confirm details with the study team.

Can I leave a clinical trial after joining?

Yes. Participation is always voluntary, and you can leave a trial at any time, for any reason, without losing your normal medical care.

Do I qualify for these trials?

Every trial has its own eligibility criteria. Beacon translates each trial's criteria into a plain-language checklist you can review and bring to your doctor — only the study team can confirm whether you qualify.

Page updated July 2026.

Beacon is an information tool, not medical advice. Whether a trial is right for you is a decision for you, your doctor, and the study team. Trial details come from the official registry, ClinicalTrials.gov, and may change — always confirm with the study team. Beacon collects no data about you: this page has no cookies, no accounts, and no tracking.