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Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT02196610

Feasibility Study of Arterial Stiffness in Hemodialysis Patients

Arterial Stiffness in Healthy Subjects and Patients With End-Stage- Renal Disease: A Feasibility Study

Status
Terminated
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
36 (actual)
Sponsor
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

People with kidney failure have a higher chance of getting disease in the blood vessels and this result in a decreased elasticity of the arteries of their body which make them very stiff or hard. It appears that stiffer arteries with a decreased elasticity increase the risk of stroke and heart disease. A novel way to know the stiffness of blood vessels is by a method called "applanation tonometry", which measures the "pulse wave velocity" of major blood vessels such as the aorta, carotid and femoral arteries. The purpose of our study is to determine if we can measure arterial stiffness reliably and accurately using this method in healthy people and in people with kidney failure receiving hemodialysis treatments at our centre. Also, we would like to know how stiff these arteries in healthy people are. If we demonstrate that the method is reliable and accurate in these 2 groups of participants at our centre, a future larger study is planned to determine if we can use measures of arterial stiffness to evaluate the risk of stroke and heart disease in people with kidney failure receiving hemodialysis. The research study will take place at the Ottawa Hospital-Riverside Campus.

Detailed description

Background: Cardiovascular (CV) disease is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Arterial stiffness measured by pulse-wave velocity (PWV) has been identified as an independent predictor of fatal CV events in these patients. Our long-term goal is to study the impact of interventions that decrease progressive arterial stiffness on CV mortality in ESRD patients. Thus, we postulate that measurements of PWV during these interventions will predict CV outcome. Before studying this relationship, establishing the feasibility of PWV measurements at our centre is necessary. Objectives: i) To demonstrate the reliability and accuracy of arterial PWV measurements in healthy subjects and patients with ESRD at our centre, ii) To assess subject satisfaction and level of discomfort associated with the testing procedure, iii) To characterize normative values for the PWV in our two subject groups, and iv) To determine the feasibility of recruitment of patients with ESRD, as a pre-requisite for a larger trial focused on CV outcomes. Methods: PWV will be measured consecutively by 2 research assistants in: a) a group of 20 healthy subjects; and b) a group of 20 patients with ESRD on chronic hemodialysis at The Ottawa Hospital. Two consecutive sets of PWV measurements with a time-interval of 1 week (± 2 days) will be obtained in the healthy and ESRD groups (pre-hemodialysis, between 2 consecutive mid-week hemodialysis sessions). To determine the impact of hemodialysis on PWV measures, in a sub-group of 10 ESRD subjects measurements will be taken before and after hemodialysis. The order of testing by the 2 assistants will be randomized.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERApplanation tonometryTwo consecutive sets of carotid-femoral Pulse Wave Velocity (PWV) measurements by Applanation tonometry with a time-interval of 1 week will be obtained (1 week ± 2 days). Two research assistants will each perform a carotid-femoral-PWV measurement at each time point with the testing order randomized.

Timeline

Start date
2014-11-01
Primary completion
2016-03-01
Completion
2016-03-01
First posted
2014-07-22
Last updated
2016-05-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02196610. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.