Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT00454714

Therapeutic Effect of Sildenafil in Patients With Coronary Vasospasm

Application of Sildenafil in Patients With Documented Coronary Vasospasm to Explore the Pathophysiology of Coronary Vasospasm and the Therapeutic Effect of Sildenafil in Patients Suffering From Coronary Vasospasm

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Udo Sechtem · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This will be a prospective, phase IIIb, double-blind and randomized trial testing the effect of single dose sildenafil application in patients with coronary vasospasm compared to placebo application. The target variable to be tested is the degree of coronary vasoconstriction in response to intracoronary ACh application (in addition to clinical chest pain) which will be imaged by coronary angiography and measured using quantitative coronary angiography software. Main objective: Has sildenafil the potency to inhibit the induction of coronary vasospasm by intracoronary ACh-application in patients with proven coronary artery spasm? Secondary objective: Which degree of coronary vasospasm inhibition can be achieved with sildenafil?

Detailed description

Coronary artery spasm is an abrupt severe vasoconstrictor response which may occur spontaneously in normal and diseased coronary arteries. It may result in myocardial ischemia and may be provoked by various stimuli such as acetylcholine (ACh). Coronary vasospasm is involved in the pathogenesis of Prinzmetal's angina, acute myocardial infarction or sudden cardiac death due to ventricular arrythmias and chest pain symptoms associated with viral myocarditis. The precise cellular and molecular mechanisms of coronary vasospasm have not yet been elucidated. The most often suggested but competing explanations for this disease are coronary endothelial dysfunction secondary to impaired nitric oxide production versus coronary smooth muscle cell hyperreactivity with or without additional endothelial dysfunction. As the precise cellular mechanism is currently unknown a large group of people can currently not be treated appropriately despite the use of nitrates and calcium antagonists. Sildenafil is a phosphodiesterase(PDE)-5 inhibitor approved for the treatment of both erectile dysfunction and pulmonary hypertension. PDE-5 has been shown to be also present and play an important vasomotor role in the coronary vessel wall. Application of the inhibitor sildenafil has been shown to increase the resting coronary artery diameter. Furthermore, atherosclerotic coronary artery segments which vasoconstrict following intracoronary ACh-application vasodilate following the application of sildenafil when ACh-testing is repeated. Other studies are also suggesting an improved endothelial function after sildenafil application for both the coronary and the peripheral vasculature. Taken together, sildenafil is expected to have a positive effect on coronary vasomotility. Whether sildenafil can totally prevent the occurrence of coronary vasospasm or at least decrease the severity of vasospasm has not been studied so far. Thus, the aim of this study is to analyse the possible anti-spastic effects of sildenafil in patients suffering from coronary vasospasm.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGsingle dose SildenafilApplication of a single dose Sildenafil
DRUGSingle dose placeboApplication of a single dose placebo

Timeline

Start date
2007-03-01
Primary completion
2009-12-31
Completion
2009-12-31
First posted
2007-04-02
Last updated
2017-04-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00454714. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.