Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02738658

Comparison of the Vasomotor Function and Myocardial Flow in Patients Treated With Bioresorbable and Metallic Stents at 1 Year

Comparison of the Vasomotor Function and Myocardial Flow in Patients Treated

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
70 (actual)
Sponsor
Institut d'Investigació Biomèdica de Bellvitge · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Background: A total of 25-50% of patients with stable coronary atherosclerosis treated with metallic stent implantation remain with effort angina despite optimal medical treatment and absence of stent restenosis at 1 year. The most plausible cause of persistent effort angina after stent implantation is microcirculatory dysfunction. Coronary circulation matches the myocardial blood supply and oxygen consumption. Metallic stent implantation has been related with endothelial dysfunction and impaired coronary blood flow reserve (relation between coronary blood flow at rest and maximal hyperemia) of the treated vessel at 1 year. Bioresorbable Vascular Scaffold (BVS) has been shown to improve the endothelial function and to improve the angina symptoms at 1 year. However, the coronary blood flow of BVS has never been tested. Main objective: To determine differences in the blood average peak velocity at maximal hyperemia with adenosine infusion between patients treated with bioresorbable and metallic coronary stents at 1 year after stent implantation. Methodology: A total of 70 patients are 1:1 randomized to everolimus-eluting metallic stent (EES) versus everolimus-eluting BVS implantation in patients with stable coronary disease. At 1 year, patients undergo to invasive coronary angiography prior cessation of vasomotor drugs. A pressure/Doppler wire is advanced distally to the "treated segment" and the endothelial (acetylcholine) and non-endothelial (adenosine and nitroglycerine) vasomotor function is assessed with quantitative coronary angiography and pressure and Doppler measurements. Angina test questionnaires are obtained at different time-points of the study. Expected results: A difference between patients treated with BVS and EES of 12.0 cm/sc in the maximal average peak velocity (APV) under maximal hyperemia (with adenosine administration) is expected, as assessed by Doppler measurements, at 1 year after stent implantation. The study is powered to assess superiority in terms of maximal APV favoring patients treated with BVS.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEBioresorbable vascular scaffold
DEVICEEverolimus-eluting stent

Timeline

Start date
2015-03-01
Primary completion
2018-07-02
Completion
2018-07-02
First posted
2016-04-14
Last updated
2018-07-03

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02738658. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.