Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT01076660

Left Ventricular Structural Predictors of Sudden Cardiac Death

Left Ventricular Structural Predictors of Sudden Cardiac Death [Substudy of: Functional Energetics and Imaging for Phenotypic Characterization of Patients at Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death, See Also NCT000181233]

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
400 (estimated)
Sponsor
Johns Hopkins University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) poses a significant health care challenge with high annual incidence and low survival rates. Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) prevent SCD in patients with poor heart function. However, the critical survival benefit afforded by the devices is accompanied by short and long-term complications and a high economic burden. Moreover, in using current practice guidelines of reduced heart function, specifically left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF)≤35%, as the main determining factor for patient selection, only a minority of patients actually benefit from ICD therapy (\<25% in 5 years). There is an essential need for more robust diagnostic approaches to SCD risk stratification. This project examines the hypothesis that structural abnormalities of the heart itself, above and beyond global LV dysfunction, are important predictors of SCD risk since they indicate the presence of the abnormal tissue substrate required for the abnormal electrical circuits and heart rhythms that actually lead to SCD. Information about the heart's structure will be obtained from cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and used in combination with a number of other clinical risk factors to see if certain characteristics can better predict patients at risk for SCD.

Detailed description

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) poses a significant health care challenge with high annual incidence and low survival rates. Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) prevent SCD in patients with left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction. However, the critical survival benefit afforded by the devices is accompanied by short and long-term complications and a high economic burden. Moreover, in using current practice guidelines of LV ejection fraction (LVEF)≤35% as the main determining factor for patient selection, only a minority of patients actually benefit from ICD therapy (\<25% in 5 years). There is an essential need for more robust diagnostic approaches to SCD risk stratification. This project examines the hypothesis that LV structural abnormalities above and beyond global LV dysfunction are important predictors of SCD risk since they indicate the presence of abnormal pathophysiologic substrate required for the ventricular arrhythmogenicity leading to SCD. This premise is supported by pre-clinical models and limited patient cohort studies examining the contribution of individual LV structural indices. However, there has been no prospective study of primary prevention ICD candidates in sufficiently large numbers to investigate the incremental value of a comprehensive assessment of LV structure on SCD risk over and above that of LVEF and readily available demographic and clinical variables. LV structure can be quantified in detail using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging with late gadolinium enhancement (CMR-LGE). Specifically, accurate assessment of global LV function, volumes, mass, geometry, and infarct/scar characteristics are feasible and obtainable clinically in a single examination. We aim to examine whether or not any of these CMR indices or combination of indices are better able to discriminate between patients with high versus low susceptibility to SCD within the broader population of reduced LVEF patients. If the results of these studies demonstrate that LV structure is an important prognostic risk factor, it may be then be possible to more specifically focus ICD therapy to those who are most likely to benefit and avoid unnecessary device implantations.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2003-10-01
Primary completion
2028-06-01
Completion
2030-06-01
First posted
2010-02-26
Last updated
2026-01-20

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01076660. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.