Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
Showing 1-20 of 925 trials
NCT06710184
The main goal of this study is to compare two treatments in patients with a specific type of heart attack called Non-ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction (NSTEMI). The investigators want to find out whether using aspirin alone is as effective and safer than using aspirin together with a second blood thinner called fondaparinux. Both treatments will be given before a scheduled heart procedure called coronary angiography (CAG), which may include balloon dilation and stent placement (PCI) if needed. The current guidelines recommend using aspirin in combination with a second blood thinner like fondaparinux before CAG and possible PCI. However, these recommendations are based on studies from the 1990s, a time when invasive procedures were not standard practice for these patients. In contrast, nearly all patients with NSTEMI in Denmark (96%) now undergo CAG within 72 hours. This change in practice raises questions about whether the older studies still provide a valid foundation for today's guidelines. The study aims to answer two questions: 1. Is aspirin alone as effective as aspirin combined with fondaparinux before early CAG and possible PCI? 2. Is aspirin alone safer, with a lower risk of severe bleeding, compared to the combination treatment? To answer these questions, the investigators will enroll about 5,000 patients with NSTEMI. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either aspirin alone or aspirin with fondaparinux. The investigators will monitor them for 30 days to compare outcomes such as death, new heart attacks, the need for urgent CAG before the scheduled, and severe bleeding.
NCT04008173
ISACS ARCHIVES network is part of ISACS TC (NCT01218776) health care program. It is a collaborative network of research centers that support the rapid development of new scientific information and analytic tools. The ISACS ARCHIVES network assists health care providers, scientists, and policymakers seeking unbiased information about the outcomes, clinical effectiveness, safety, and appropriateness of health care items and services, particularly prescription medications and medical devices in acute coronary syndromes (ACS).
NCT07478003
BACKGROUND Myocardial reperfusion with the use of primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) including stent implantation is the most efficacious treatment for patients with (STEMI) and improves prognosis significantly. Due to continuous improvements in the treatment, the mortality for patients with STEMI has decreased dramatically, but despite these improvements, the mortality rate seems to have reached a plateau at around 10% within 1 year. In addition, 10% develop clinical heart failure with a per se 50% mortality rate within 5 years. Moreover, congestive heart failure is associated with a highly impaired quality of life due to fatigue dyspnea and reduced exercise capacity. Thus, there is a need for further improvement in the treatment to drive the event rates further down. One such key target is reducing the damage to the heart muscle (infarct size) to preserve the heart function and prevent mortality and heart failure. One major driver of infarct size and mortality is reperfusion injury which may account for up to 50% of the damaged myocardium. Reperfusion injury occurs within the first minutes to hours after the restoration of the blood flow in the occluded artery and reperfusion therapy can therefore be considered a "double-edged sword", since the ischemic injury may additionally be worsened by reperfusion injury. However, the phenomenon of reperfusion injury is not completely understood, and no preventive treatments exist. Multiple pathophysiological factors may contribute to reperfusion injury of which inflammation has been described as a key factor. Inflammation is induced immediately after the onset of acute myocardial ischemia and is subsequently exacerbated following reperfusion. Hence, inflammation per se may drive excessive cardiomyocyte death resulting in decreased contractility and increased infarct size post-STEMI. Moreover, in the course following STEMI and subsequently reperfusion, the myocardium starts healing and scarring resulting in remodelling of the ventricle potentially causing either compensatory hypertrophy or thinning of the myocardium, which may lead to reduced left ventricle ejection fraction (LVEF) and heart failure. Of note, inflammation plays a critical role in ventricular remodeling post-AMI, thus inflammation in relation to reperfusion injury may extend myocardial damage following STEMI. Glucocorticoids are crucial in the regulation of the systemic inflammatory response and may therefore be beneficial in limiting myocardial injury following STEMI. We previously conducted the phase II randomized, placebo-controlled PULSE-MI trial (Nov 2022-Oct 2023) in 742 prehospital STEMI patients, showing pulse-dose glucocorticoid was safe and improved LVEF, infarct size, and microvascular obstruction, with a trend toward lower 3-month mortality. However, as the trial was not powered for clinical outcomes, it remains unproven whether this treatment reduces post-STEMI mortality. Thus, the aim of this prospective, randomized trial is to evaluate the effect of prehospital pulse-dose glucocorticoid on all-cause mortality in patients with STEMI. To reduce the degree of inflammation effectively and adequately, intervention is to be made as soon as possible as close to initiation of ischemia, as recognized from patients' symptom debut, and before revascularization with primary PCI in the prehospital setting since the effect is more pronounced if the treatment is initiated early after the onset of STEMI. In addition to reperfusion induced inflammation, ischemia itself, immediately after occlusion of the artery, induces inflammation. Hence, initiation of the intervention in the ambulance is needed to harvest the potentially beneficial effects of pulse glucocorticoid therapy as soon as possible. Thus, by performing intervention in the pre-hospital setting, the investigators expect that participation in the trial will have the potential to produce a direct clinically relevant benefit for the patient resulting in reduced all-cause mortality in patients with STEMI. HYPOTHESIS In patients with STEMI undergoing primary PCI, 250 mg methylprednisolone administrated in the pre-hospital setting reduces all-cause mortality. SAMPLE SIZE The primary endpoint is all-cause mortality one year after the last patient has been included. The median follow-up of the trial is expected to be 3 years and minimum follow-up of 1 year. As an estimate based on findings from the PULSE-MI trial and the DANAMI-3 trial, the estimated event rate of in the placebo arm is 9% during follow-up. Glucocorticoid is expected to reduce all-cause mortality corresponding to a hazard ratio of 0.77. To demonstrate the reduction in the primary outcome with an 80% power at a 5% significance level, 2602 patients in each treatment arm is needed, thus 5204 patients in total. The primary analyses will be intention to treat principle
NCT07142265
Evaluation of clinical outcomes during 12 months after inclisiran initiation in patients after STEMI/non-STEMI in real-world settings in Russia. It is also planned to study the therapy effect on the lipid profile characteristics, its safety, the state of atherosclerotic plaques according to carotid ultrasound, the frequency of hospitalizations and the need for intensive follow-up.
NCT04951856
AMUNDSEN-real is a phase IV, international (7 European countries), multicenter, controlled, open label study randomized, in 2 parallel groups of patients with a diagnosis of STEMI or NSTEMI with an indication for PCI, using the PROBE study design (Prospective Randomised Open, Blinded Endpoint). The objective of this study is to demonstrate the superiority of evolocumab versus standard of care in reaching a LDL-C reduction of ≥ 50% from baseline and a LDL-C goal of \<1.4 mmol/L (\<55 mg/dL) at 12 months follow-up on the overall population. The primary clinical objective is to demonstrate the superiority of evolocumab versus standard of care on the composite endpoint of death or any unplanned hospitalization for a CV reason at 12 months. Central randomization uses an IWRS. Stratification is by center and stratum with random block size, generated according to the procedures of the sponsor, by a statistician not involved in the study.
NCT05510661
Aim of this single center randomized open label trial with blinded in-hospital outcomes assessment is designed with aim to compare manual thrombus aspiration followed by percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) strategy with PCI alone.
NCT05604131
The objective of this randomized, controlled pilot study is to determine the efficacy of Deferiprone to reduce the amount of free iron inside the hemorrhagic zone of myocardial infarction among hemorrhagic myocardial infarction patients.
NCT02914483
The Women's HARP study is a multi-center study focusing on women with clinical presentation of myocardial infarction (MI). Women will complete stress questionnaires following presentation to the medical center with elevated cardiac enzymes and abnormal electrocardiograms (ECGs). 2 months following MI, participants will be screened for the Stress Ancillary Study and enrolled if an elevated level of perceived stress is reported. After completing baseline assessments, participants will be randomized to Enhanced Usual Care (EUC) or stress management for 8 weeks. Participants will be followed for 6 months.
NCT03772743
Elderly patients presenting with myocardial infarction (MI) and multivessel disease are the highest risk population with the worst prognosis. No trial has ever been designed to optimize their outcome. The actual real-life standard of care is, in the best of the cases, culprit only revascularization. However, real-life registries show that outcome of MI elderly patients treated with this strategy is far from being optimal with at least a 15% rate of cardiac death or myocardial infarction at 1 year. To date, studies on this population have been focused on devices (bare metal stent vs biodegradable drug eluting stent) or on dual antiplatelet regimen (long vs short) and no study was focused on evaluating if complete revascularization is able to improve the prognosis in these patients. The contemporary complete revascularization is represented by a functionally-driven revascularization that recently showed to significantly reduce myocardial infarction rate and outperformed an angio-complete revascularization. Thus, our hypothesis is that a functionally-driven complete revascularization in elderly patients with MI and multivessel disease may improve prognosis compared to the actual standard of care in these patients, namely culprit only revascularization. Being a "strategy" trial, we identified the patient-oriented composite endpoint (POCE) as primary outcome of interest (all cause death, any MI, any stroke, any revascularization). Several pre-specified substudies have been planned. A detailed list of the substudies is available in the website of the trial (http://www.thefiretrial.com)
NCT07507110
This is a retrospective study from double center: Xuzhou Central Hospital and The First People's Hospital of Yancheng. Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) were screened and AMI complicating with cardiogenic shock were included. This study is to investigate the relationship between red blood cell distribution width-to-albumin ratio (RAR) and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) in acute myocardial infarction complicated with cardiogenic shock (AMI-CS) patients during hospitalization.
NCT04927949
This study aims to evaluate the impact on myocardial reperfusion and residual thrombotic burden of adding Cangrelor -a potent and immediate P2Y12 inhibitor- to ticagrelor in primary PCI patients with high on ticagrelor platelet reactivity compared to standard of care with ticagrelor alone.
NCT06939738
The ASSIST clinical study is an observational, multicenter study to assess the performance of a cloud-based and AI-powered electrocardiogram (ECG) analysis platform, named Willem™, developed to detect Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI). The main objectives are to compare Willem™ performance to detect and triage ECG patterns associated with AMI compared with human ECG interpretation, and to assess the time periods for both approaches.
NCT06678074
Adults who have had an ST-elevation myocardial infarction and were treated with stent placement will receive an intravenous infusion of a monoclonal antibody in order to prevent further heart muscle damage. The goal is to learn if this treatment improves some measures of heart function and inflammation. The study treatment patients will be compared to patients who receive placebo (inactive treatment).
NCT05168462
Rationale: Pump failure due to acute myocardial infarction (AMI) can lead to cardiogenic shock (CS): a state of low blood flow to end-organs with subsequent multi-organ failure that is associated with high mortality rated. The first line pharmacologic treatment strategy in CS is noradrenaline. This vasopressor drug is used to maintain adequate blood pressures. The assumption is that a mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) ≥ 65 mmHg will improve flow and thereby tissue perfusion of myocardium and other tissues (e.g. renal). However, there is no evidence that an increase in MAP, if achieved by noradrenaline, leads to greater end-organ blood flow and better outcomes. Objective: With this study the investigators aim to investigate the (cost-)effectiveness of reduced noradrenaline in patients with CS by using a lower MAP target of ≥ 55 mmHg, compared to ≥ 65 mmHg. The investigators hypothesize that reduced use of noradrenaline will improve overall survival and decrease renal failure requiring renal replacement therapy. Study design: Open label, randomized controlled multicenter trial Study population: Adults patients with CS due to AMI Intervention: Treatment strategy of reduced noradrenaline, by using a lower MAP target ( ≥ 55 mmHg). Main study endpoint: composite of all-cause mortality and severe renal failure leading to renal replacement therapy within 30-days after randomization.
NCT03620266
Background: Bilberries from Sweden, rich in polyphenols, have shown cholesterol-lowering effects in small studies, and the cholesterol-lowering properties of oats, with abundant beta-glucans and potentially bioactive phytochemicals, are well established. Both may provide cardiometabolic benefits for patients with manifest chronic cardiometabolic disease, such as type 2 diabets mellitus (T2DM) and myocardial infarction (MI). However, large studies of adequate statistical power and appropriate duration are needed to confirm clinically relevant treatment effects. No previous study has evaluated the potential additive or synergistic effects of bilberry combined with oats on cardiometabolic risk factors. Design: This is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Our primary objective is to assess cardioprotective effects of diet supplementation with dried bilberry and with bioprocessed oat bran, with a secondary explorative objective of assessing their combination, compared with a neutral isocaloric reference supplement, for patients diagnosed with T2DM and/or MI. Patients will be randomized 1:1:1:1 to a three-month intervention. The primary endpoint is the difference in LDL cholesterol change between the intervention groups after three months. The major secondary endpoint is exercise capacity at three months. Other secondary endpoints include plasma concentrations of biochemical markers of inflammation, glycaemia, and gut microbiota composition after three months. Implications: Secondary prevention after cardiometabolic disease, including T2DM and MI, has improved during the last decades but diabetes complications, readmissions and cadiovascular related deaths following these conditions remain large health care challenges. Controlling hyperlipidemia, hyperglycaemia, hypertension and inflammation is critical to preventing (new) cardiovascular events, but novel pharmacological treatments for these conditions are expensive and associated with negative side effects. If bilberry and/or oat, in addition to standard medical therapy, can lower LDL cholesterol and inflammation more than standard therapy alone, this could be a cost-effective and safe dietary strategy for secondary prevention in high-risk patients or risk prevention in subjects with T2DM.
NCT07482865
A prospective, multi-center, open label, randomized controlled, superiority trial to compare clinical outcomes between routine distal perfusion catheter (DPC) insertion versus provisional distal perfusion catheter (DPC) insertion in the occurrence of sign or symptom of acute limb ischemia in patients undergoing mechanical circulatory support (MCS) through femoral artery approach.
NCT02669810
A multicentric controlled phase I / IIb study evaluating the safety and the efficacy of in vitro expanded peripheral blood CD34+ stem cells output by the StemXpand® Automated Process, and injected in patients with an acute myocardial infarction and a LVEF remaining below 50% versus standard of care.
NCT04528511
To validate the prognostic importance of the burden of new-onset atrial fibrillation (NOAF) complicating acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in a prospectively designed hospital-based registry. To characterize those factors that contribute to the progression of post-MI NOAF burden. To establish a prediction model for the risk stratification of patients with NOAF complicating AMI. To explore the clinical usefulness of NOAF burden in guiding the anticoagulation therapy among patients with post-MI NOAF.
NCT04973397
The proportion of noncardiac surgeries performed as same-day surgery is increasing worldwide, with more complex surgeries being performed on higher risk patients in the outpatient setting. Little is known on the risk factors, incidence and prognosis of patients undergoing same-day noncardiac surgery. The main objective of this study is to inform on the incidence and risk factors of cardiovascular and other adverse events after same-day surgery and to develop risk prediction tools to better inform on the risk and selection of patients undergoing same-day surgery.
NCT07052799
One in 4 adults between 50 and 80 reports taking regular aspirin. The prevalence of aspirin uses increases with age as well as co-morbid vascular diseases. Patients with cardiovascular diseases are at risk of developing colorectal neoplasms. In patients undergoing screening colonoscopy, interruption of aspirin is believed to be associated with increased cardiovascular events. Continuation of aspirin can however be associated with an increased risk of post-polypectomy bleeding. International guidelines on periendoscopy management recommend the continuation of aspirin based on evidence from cohort studies, mostly retrospective, suggesting that the rate of bleeding is low. Cardiovascular complications from aspirin interruption can lead to disabilities and occasional deaths. The cardiovascular risks following aspirin continuation or interruption in endoscopy have not been well studied. There has been no randomized study to compare either strategy. Endoscopists are divided on their opinion on whether to stop or to continue aspirin. The proposed large randomized controlled trial (RCT) is powered to detect small differences in both outcomes. Findings from this RCT will address this important question and inform our clinical practice.