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RecruitingNCT04183426

Tonometry(1) and Duplex Ultrasound(2) to Predict CV Events in to be Treated Patients With an AAA

Tonometry(1) and Duplex Ultrasound(2) to Predict Cardiovascular Events in to be Treated Patients With an Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (One-Two-Treat Trial)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
194 (estimated)
Sponsor
Rijnstate Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a common vascular disease and associated with risk of rupture, but also with a high cardiovascular (CV) event rate. A key difficulty in AAA is predicting these life-threatening complications, which are strongly linked to vascular health. In 2013, the SMART risk score was developed to calculate the risk of the patients for recurrent vascular events based on clinical characteristics. Recently, a novel, easy to perform, non-invasive test of endothelial function (the carotid artery reactivity (CAR) test), reflecting target organ damage, has been introduced. The CAR is a simple, quick (5-min), non-invasive test that uses ultrasound to examine the carotid artery in response to sympathetic stimulation by placing one hand in cold water. This test shows strong agreement with both coronary and aortic responses to sympathetic stimulation and predicted CV-events in patients with peripheral arterial disease. The aim of this prospective 2-year follow-up study is to investigate the predictive capacity of the CAR-test for development of CV-events after elective AAA repair in comparison to the SMART risk score. Secondary objectives are to investigate the predictive capacity of arterial stiffness measurements and the post-operative CAR-test for development of CV-events and to evaluate health status scores to provide insight if these scores can support clinical decision making.

Detailed description

The investigators will include 194 patients with an AAA who will be scheduled for repair. Participants will be recruited from all collaborating hospitals (currently Radboudumc, Rijnstate, CWZ) after providing written informed consent. In this observational, prospective study, a total of 194 patients who are going to be treated for their AAA will be included. Baseline patient characteristics will be registered, including traditional risk factors and CV-history. In addition to regular care of measuring AAA diameter progression (in mm/year), we will perform the CAR-test (10-min) and non-invasive arterial stiffness measures (PWA and PWV) with the SphygmoCor device (10-min). Furthermore, the investigators will ask patients to complete a questionnaire about the quality of their life. A second questionnaire tries to clarify the disease experience of the patients. Both questionnaires will be asked to be completed at the start, 6-8 weeks after repair, after one year and after two years of repair. Subsequently, the investigators will record major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) according to the International Classification of Disease-10. Registration of MACE will be performed using hospital-records and following international guidelines. Across a 2-year follow-up, by means of regular follow-up appointments, the investigators will examine the ability of the CAR parameter and arterial stiffness parameters to predict CV-events.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTCarotid Artery Reactivity test (CAR test)The CAR test will be applied to stimulate the sympathetic nervous system. This thermal stimulus is known to elevate blood pressure via sympathetic pathways, so it can be used to study the vascular response to sympathetic activation. The participant will submerge their left hand in a bucket of ice water (approximately 4 degrees celcius) for 3 minutes, which is reported to be sufficient to induce a maximal dilation in the common carotid artery. At baseline and every minute after the hand is submerged in ice water, the blood pressure will be measured to check whether a sympathetic stimulation is achieved.
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTArterial StiffnessThe SphygmoCor device will be used to non-invasively measure arterial stiffness parameters using applanation tonometry. For Pulse Wave Analyses (PWA), the radial waveform will be recorded. Approximately 10 waveforms are averaged, resulting in several non-invasive parameters: * Peripheral pressure parameters * Central and abdominal aneurysm pressure parameters (derived using a transfer function) * Cardiac output parameters (sub-endocardial viability ratio (SEVR), Ejection Duration (ED)) Pulse wave velocity will be performed by recording the waveforms of the carotid and femoral artery sequentially. The travelled distance will be measured according to the current guidelines and entered in the program. The program will calculate the PWV based on 10 ECG triggered waveform of each artery.

Timeline

Start date
2020-06-12
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2027-06-01
First posted
2019-12-03
Last updated
2025-03-06

Locations

7 sites across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04183426. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.