Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT03704701

The Interrogation of the Cardiomyopathy of Chronic Kidney Disease With advancEd caRdiac Imaging

Status
Terminated
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
28 (actual)
Sponsor
NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Patients with kidney failure have a much higher risk of heart disease compared to people of the same age without kidney failure. The reason for this is not fully understood. In this project we will use Cardiac MRI (CMR), which is a very detailed scan of the heart and blood vessels, to try to better understand the cardiovascular changes that occur in kidney failure. We will perform CMR scans in 30 patients before and after dialysis (a treatment for patients with kidney failure) to see whether dialysis changes the heart muscle. The same patients will also undergo another type of heart scan, called a CT scan. This will allow us to compare the pictures from the 2 different types of scan to help us better understand any damage to the heart muscle that is present. Finally, we will test a new way to measure hardening of blood vessels on CMR. These three studies will help us to better understand the heart and blood vessel changes that happen in kidney failure. This research will also be useful for patients without kidney failure. We hope to be able to use it in the future to see which new treatments might be able to reduce the risk of heart disease in patients with kidney failure.

Detailed description

Background: Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are at a dramatically increased risk of cardiovascular disease. This risk is greatest in patients on dialysis and is not explained by conventional cardiovascular risk factors. Myocardial fibrosis, so called Cardiomyopathy of CKD (CM-CKD), in conjunction with excessive arterial calcification, forms the pathological basis for this excess risk. Due to limitations of using myocardial biopsy, combined with the inability to use gadolinium-enhanced imaging in patients with advanced CKD, there is an urgent need for reliable non-invasive ways of diagnosing and investigating CM-CKD. Study participants: Adult patients established on regular hospital-based haemodialysis, with evidence of recurrent fluid overload requiring fluid removal by ultrafiltration on dialysis. Study design: This is a single centre observational study. We will perform cardiac MRI (CMR), contrast CT and blood tests in 30 patients before haemodialysis, with a repeat CMR and blood tests post-dialysis. Objectives: To assess: 1. If myocardial native T1 mapping on CMR is affected by fluid status and therefore test the validity of T1 mapping as a marker of fibrosis within the dialysis population? 2. If contrast-enhanced dynamic-equilibrium CT can refine insights into the myocardium in CM-CKD? 3. If novel CMR methods can effectively identify and delineate arterial calcification compared to CT? Relevance: This project will have immediate clinical relevance by clarifying key questions in the diagnosis and investigation of CM-CKD. It will also inform as to the potential role for these novel imaging biomarkers as surrogate end-points for use in future clinical trials exploring disease specific drug therapies.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTCardiac MRI and contrast-enhanced cardiac CTCardiac MRI Contrast-enhanced cardiac CT

Timeline

Start date
2018-10-10
Primary completion
2020-08-05
Completion
2020-08-05
First posted
2018-10-15
Last updated
2022-02-21

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03704701. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.