Trials / Unknown
UnknownNCT02396875
Selective Coronary Vein Sampling in Left Bundle Branch Block and CRT
Selective Coronary Vein Sampling in Dyssynchronous Heart Failure and Cardiac Resynchronisation Therapy to Assess Physiological Response to Exercise and Characterise Regional Release of Novel Biomarkers
- Status
- Unknown
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 70 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) prolongs the life and improves the symptoms in patients with heart failure and electrical dyssynchrony. 30-50% of patients do not improve with the treatment which is both expensive and not without complication. Despite much research, we cannot accurately predict who will not respond. Furthermore, most heart failure patients gets symptoms on exercise and most studies have examined patients at rest. We propose to investigate the effect of exercise on different parts of the left ventricle by sampling various biomarkers of metabolism, myocardial injury and gene expression. We will then repeat the protocol following device insertion to look for changes. This novel work will require a small cohort of patients with heart failure and no electrical dyssynchrony and normal patients to act as controls. We will also measure novel biomarkers at different venous sites relating to different parts of the myocardium to determine whether they can be used to prognosticate or even predict response to CRT.
Detailed description
We propose to examine the acute effects of exercise on patients with dyssynchronous electrical activation of the heart and heart failure and to compare the release of novel biomarkers in selective areas of coronary venous drainage by direct cannulation of different veins via the coronary sinus (CS). The study design will separate patients into a minimally invasive arm (MINARM)and an invasive arm (INARM). The INARM will be recruited from patients in the MINARM. MINARM Group 1: 40 patients scheduled for CRT implant Group 2: 15 patients with heart failure and no dyssynchrony Group 3: 15 patients with normal hearts Group 1: 40 patient undergoing CRT will have venous samples taken from the CS, two CS tributaries, peripheral venous and peripheral arterial sites at the time of CRT insertion at the time of device implant. Blood samples will be analysed for metabolites and novel biomarkers They will then undergo repeat sampling at 6 months to assess for changes in the micro RNA and biomarker profile including CS sampling. Group 2 and 3 A control arm of 15 patients with heart failure and no dyssynchrony (Group 2) and 15 patients with normal hearts (Group 3) will undergo peripheral venous sampling for biomarkers and this will be repeated at 6 months. These samples will allow for control against the dyssynchronous heart failure group and also for temporal changes in micro RNA expression. 10 patient from Group 1 and 5 from Group 2 and 3 will be invited to from part of the INARM at the time of recruitment. INARM study Methods: GROUP A 10 pts with heart failure and dyssynchronous ventricular contraction GROUP B 5 pts with heart failure and no electrical dyssynchrony schedule for either coronary angiography or electrophysiology study. GROUP C 5 pts schedule for diagnostic coronary angiography or electrophysiology study with normal cardiac function The exact details of the protocol will vary depending upon the Group: GROUP A 1 On the day preceding the CRT implant will attend hospital for a temporary invasive catheter study. A pacing protocol will be performed using a pacing wire inserted into the right atrium. Coronary sinus venous blood sampling will be performed using a catheter placed via the femoral or internal jugular vein. At the chief investigator's discretion a specially designed exercise bicycle that allow supine exercise in the catheter lab will be used rather than the atrial pacing wire. 3 6 months post implant the patients will return to the catheter laboratory for a further study. This will repeat the protocol but with the device having been on for 6 months. This will require further arterial access as described above. This study should take approximately an hour. GROUP B and C It is common practice for these patients to have a coronary angiogram to exclude ischaemic heart disease as the cause of their heart failure or chest pain or to have electrophysiology study to determine the mechanism of arrhythmia. If their angiogram is normal,we will perform a pacing protocol (this will be required if they are attending for an electrophysiology study). This will require 2 femoral venous access sites (similar to standard electrophysiological study) to allow temporary atrial pacing and acquisition of blood samples from the coronary sinus. Following the invasive part of the study patients in Group B and C will fall back into Group 2 and 3 of MINARM and attend at 6 month for peripheral blood sampling.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| PROCEDURE | Blood sampling and exercise protocol pre and post CRT implant | |
| PROCEDURE | Peripheral blood sampling | |
| PROCEDURE | Central blood sampling pre and post CRT implant | |
| PROCEDURE | Central blood sampling on one occasion and exercise protocol and 6 month peripheral sampling |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2015-04-01
- Primary completion
- 2016-05-01
- Completion
- 2016-12-01
- First posted
- 2015-03-24
- Last updated
- 2015-03-24
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02396875. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.