ARCA biopharma, Inc. announced the completion of patient follow-up for GENETIC-AF, a Phase 2B, double-blind, superiority clinical trial evaluating GencaroTM (bucindolol hydrochloride) as a potential genetically-targeted treatment for atrial fibrillation (AF). All patients completed their last study visits and were transitioned off study drug by the end of December 2017. ARCA expects to report top-line Phase 2B data in March 2018. GENETIC-AF is a Phase 2B, multi-center, randomized, double-blind, superiority clinical trial comparing the safety and efficacy of Gencaro to Toprol-XL (metoprolol succinate) for the treatment and prevention of recurrent atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter (AF/AFL) in heart failure patients with reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (HFrEF). Eligible patients have HFrEF, a history of paroxysmal AF (episodes lasting 7 days or less) or persistent AF (episodes lasting more than 7 days and less than 1 year) in the past 6 months, and the beta-1 389 arginine homozygous genotype that ARCA believes responds most favorably to Gencaro. The GENETIC-AF Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) conducted a pre-specified interim analysis in August 2017. Based on its efficacy and safety review, the DSMB recommended completion of the Phase 2B trial and indicated there were no safety concerns. The other protocol specified options for the interim analysis were accelerated development that would have transitioned the trial seamlessly to a larger Phase 3 trial of approximately 620 patients, or immediately stopping for futility. The Phase 2B trial enrolled 267 patients from the United States, Canada and Europe. All patients have completed their last study visits and transitioned off study drug. ARCA is currently performing final monitoring visits and anticipates having evaluable data for approximately 250 patients in the final Phase 2B analysis. A randomized patient has evaluable data either when they experience their first composite endpoint event, AF/AFL or all-cause mortality, or after completion of the 24-week primary endpoint follow-up period. As the trial was statistically powered for the larger Phase 3 population, the final Phase 2B analysis will follow the same Bayesian methodology that was employed in the DSMB interim analysis, i.e., modeling the predictive probability of success (PPOS) of a future 620-patient Phase 3 study based on the time to first event of AF/AFL or all-cause mortality endpoint.