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Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT00313807

Study of Intravenous Amino Acid Infusion to Prevent Contrast Dye Mediated Renal Damage

CoNTRST - Contrast Nephropathy and Travasol for Renal Safety Trial: Intravenous Amino Acid Infusion for the Prevention of Contrast-mediated Acute Renal Failure Following Coronary Catheterization

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Queen's University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Exposure to radiographic contrast dye during coronary angiography is well known to cause either transient decreases in renal function or acute renal failure. Although the overall incidence is low, acute renal failure occurs most frequently in patients with both diabetes and chronic renal failure where the average reported incidence is upwards of 20%. The etiology of contrast-induced nephropathy is related to acute decline in renal blood flow following dye exposure resulting in ischemic injury at the level of the medulla. The development of acute renal failure following radiocontrast dye administration is significant because it contributes to morbidity and mortality in patients at risk. The administration of amino acids, either through intravenous infusion or a protein meal, results in a substantial increase in renal plasma flow (RPF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR). In both healthy subjects and in those with chronic renal failure, an amino acid infusion produces a 20% rise in GFR and effective RPF. We hypothesize that the 20% rise in effective RPF and GFR following an amino acid infusion will counteract the radiocontrast dye-induced vasoconstriction and reduce the renal toxicity of contrast medium in a group of high-risk patients.

Detailed description

Exposure to radiographic contrast dye during coronary angiography is well known to cause either transient decreases in renal function or acute renal failure. Retrospective studies have confirmed that at least 60% of contrast-associated nephropathy occurs in subjects with chronic renal failure. The incidence approaches 20% in those with a baseline creatinine greater than 198.2 μmol per liter (2.25 mg/dL). Diabetes, in the absence of renal insufficiency, does not appear to confer added risk; however diabetic patients with chronic renal failure are at highest risk. It is particularly this group that develops oliguric renal failure requiring temporary or permanent renal replacement therapy. In diabetic patients with mild to moderate renal failure, the incidence of contrast-associated nephropathy has been reported to be between 9% and 40% however a greater then 50% incidence has been noted in diabetic patients with more severely impaired renal function. It is hypothesized that the renal toxicity of contrast medium is related to local vasoconstriction. We hypothesize that the protein-stimulated rise in effective RPF and GFR might counteract this intrarenal vasoconstriction and reduce the toxicity of contrast medium in high-risk patients with diabetes. We propose that an infusion of amino acids prior to the administration of contrast dye, will increase renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate by approximately 20% and hasten excretion of the contrast agent thereby protecting high-risk patients from contrast nephropathy. This is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial evaluating the effectiveness of an amino-acid infusion in addition to usual therapy (intravenous normal saline infusion) for the prevention of renal dysfunction following angiographic dye administration during coronary angiography in a high risk group of patients with chronic renal insufficiency. Comparison: Primary and secondary outcomes in patients receiving intravenous amino acid infusion compared to placebo group receiving intravenous normal saline.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGAmino Acid7% amino acid infusion
DRUGPlacebo0.9% Saline Infusion

Timeline

Start date
2005-11-01
Completion
2008-09-01
First posted
2006-04-12
Last updated
2015-03-11

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00313807. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Study of Intravenous Amino Acid Infusion to Prevent Contrast Dye Mediated Renal Damage (NCT00313807) · Clinical Trials Directory