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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01374698

Aspirin Reload Before Percutaneous Coronary Intervention: Reperfusion Indexes Evaluation.

Preprocedural Asprin Reload for Native Coronary Disease Treated by Angioplasty: Reperfusion Indexes Evaluation and Improvement of Clinical Outcome -PANTAREI Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Roma La Sapienza · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a prospective, randomized study conducted in patients undergoing coronary revascularization procedures (PCI) through angioplasty. All patients who meet the eligibility criteria will be randomized to receive, before the procedure, an oral aspirin reload (325 mg) and to be re-evaluated at 60 minutes, 120 minutes, 6 hours, 48 hours, 5 and 30 day, 3 and 6 months.

Detailed description

Study population will be composed of 60 patients with a native coronary chronic occlusion with a vessel diameter equal or superior to 3 mm. The vessels must be treated through a balloon angioplasty and must be completely covered with two stent maximum with a maximum length ≤ 33 mm each. The native coronary chronic occlusion is defined as a native coronary obstruction, if established from at least 30 days, without lumen continuity and a "Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction" (TIMI) flow grade equal or superior to 1. Patient must be treated with an chronic (at least 7 days) oral 100 mg/die aspirin treatment. After the eligibility criteria confirmation, the patient will be randomized with a 1:1 ratio to receive the aspirin reload or not. Coronary angiographies will be evaluated by the centralized laboratory with the Coronary Quantitative Angiography method. Myocardial necrosis indexes, ejection fraction, TIMI frame count (TFC) and myocardial blush grade (MBG) variations will represent the short term primary end-points. Clinical events incidence, including death, myocardial infarction, target vessel revascularization and stent thrombosis, will be evaluated at 1, 6 and 12 months. Study design In every patient will be performed a baseline blood sample collection to evaluate inflammation, platelet activation and oxidative stress indexes. After baseline collection of blood samples, computer-generated random sequence were used for randomization to an oral aspirin reload administration or not. Every patient, as guidelines described, will receive an oral clopidogrel reload (300 mg) that will be turned to 75 mg/die oral administration for the next 6 months. After procedure, the patient will turn back to the chronic aspirin 100 mg/die oral treatment. After a percutaneous access will be obtained, it will be administered a 5000 U unfractioned heparin bolus, treating the dose to obtain a clotting time equal or superior to 250 seconds during the intervention. A basal angiography will be performed in at least two orthogonal adjoining projections using a diagnostic 6F catheter. Every angiograms must include at least 2 cm catheter length to allow accurate quantitative coronary angiographic evaluations. Target lesion will be crossed by a 0,0014" metallic guide and a single proper-dimensions-balloon predilatation will be performed inflating a nominal pression to the balloon for 15 seconds long. In 1 minute from the dilatation will be implanted a sirolimus eluting stent (SES; Cypher ™, Cordis, Johnson\& Johnson). Stent deployment will be obtained by an high pressure 10 seconds balloon inflate (more than 15 atm) without any second dilatation. No direct stent implantation will be realized. TFC and MBG will be evaluated before and after the procedure. At 60 and 120 minutes and at 6 hours after the procedure a blood sample collection will be performed to evaluate the same baseline indexes. After 48 hours, 5 and 30 day ejection fraction will be re-evaluated. Every 3 months, for 12 months at least, patient will receive an ambulatorial follow up to recognize the new ischemic symptoms or instrumental signs onset. Statistical Considerations Previous observations reported that after revascularization procedure has been observed a 35% plasmatic thromboxane levels increase (in vivo platelet activation index) in patients receiving chronic aspirin treatment (7 days). Hypothesizing that the oral aspirin reload could produce a 25% absolute reduction in plasmatic thromboxane levels (10%) this study needs a 50 patients for every treatment arm sample size (1-beta=90%; alfa=5%).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGAspirinAspirin 325 mg

Timeline

Start date
2011-01-01
Primary completion
2011-09-01
Completion
2012-09-01
First posted
2011-06-16
Last updated
2013-05-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01374698. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.