Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT03231371
Coronary Artery Vasculopathy in Pediatric Heart Transplant Patients
Early Detection of Coronary Artery Vasculopathy in Pediatric Heart Transplant Patients: A Prospective Assessment Using Coronary Flow Reserve and Contrast-Enhanced Cardiac MRI
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- Phase 3
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 22 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Bryan Goldstein · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 1 Year – 25 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Heart transplantation is a life-sustaining therapy that allows patients with either congenital or acquired heart disease and severe cardiac dysfunction to survive. Over time, however, the transplanted heart can develop problems. One of the more common and troubling problems is the development of stenoses, or narrowings, within the coronary arteries. These narrowings, technically referred to as coronary artery vasculopathy (CAV for short), account for the single most common cause of death or need for repeat heart transplant in persons more than one year post-transplant. Traditionally, CAV has been diagnosed at cardiac catheterization using coronary angiography (where dye is directly injected into the coronary blood vessels and viewed using special x-ray equipment called fluoroscopy). There is no good treatment for CAV aside from treatment of symptoms and listing for repeat heart transplantation. The goal of this study is to test several newer methods of diagnosing CAV. The first is called coronary flow reserve (catheterization test). The second is called Endo-PAT (a finger probe test) and the third is called contrast-enhanced cardiac MRI (MRI test, only for patients 12 and older). The older method (coronary angiography) will still be used in all cases, in addition to the new tests The goal is, one day, to be able to diagnose patients with CAV earlier in the course, prior to a patient's development of abnormal angiograms. If this can be done, it is possible that better therapies will be able to be used to stop or even reverse the development of CAV, perhaps reducing, or at least delaying, the need for repeat heart transplantation.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| DRUG | Adenosine | Administration of intravenous adenosine infusion over 3 minutes (0.14 ml/kg, 3mg/ml concentration, total dose). |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2008-11-01
- Primary completion
- 2011-01-01
- Completion
- 2011-01-01
- First posted
- 2017-07-27
- Last updated
- 2017-09-26
- Results posted
- 2017-09-26
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Regulatory
- FDA-regulated drug study
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03231371. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.