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CompletedNCT04875130

Adrenomedullin in Context With Pulmonary Embolism

Adrenomedullin in Context With the Diagnose of Pulmonary Embolism and Its Positive / Negative Predictive Value

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
24 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Pecs · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The pulmonary embolism (PE) causes a blockade of the pulmonary arteries typical due to a thrombus which is formed in the lower region of the body or pretty rare to other materials (tumor, air, fat). The working group plans to evaluate the pathology of the thromboembolism in the case of a partial, subtotal or even total pulmonary embolism. The acute PE is still often in the adult population and in many accompanied by death. Etiological the problem occurs through an acute right ventricular failure and leads into severe pulmonal perfusion disorder with shock and hypoxemia. The right diagnose is pretty hard in the clinical day because all symptoms are common and unspecific. To provide the best treatment in short time it is needed to sum up all the symptoms and evaluate the risk of an acute pulmonary embolism and it's morbidity. The easiest and fastest way treating a PE is to apply a systemic intravenous thrombolysis but bleeding complications are the most common and most frequently side effects. The decision-making process in patients without shock is pretty hard because of having no clear diagnose. Lab parameters and imaging (CT angiography) is important for the best decision in critical ill PE patients but time is sometimes missing. A possible new biomarker in identifying a PE is adrenomedullin. Elevated adenomedullin levels in septic patients with left ventricular heart failure, severe dyspnoea and intubated patients are well known, but in the case of PE it wasn't analysed yet. Human adrenomedullin is a protein with 52 amino acid which is produced in the lung and first extracted in the adrenal gland. The sequence homology is pretty similar to the Calcitonin-Gene-Related-Peptide (CGRP)-protein superfamily (vasodilatation). Its precursor is named pro-adrenomedullin peptide and it shows a significant weaker vasodilatation activity compaired to adrenomedullin. Adrenomedullin causes severe hypotonia in scientific studies where it was applied as an intravenous bolus or infusion. This vasodilatation effect concern to the systemic and as well in the pulmonary circulation. Its vasodilatation mechanism is not clarified yet. The trial is defined as an prospective study, where the investigators would like to measure/analyse the adrenomeulline level in PE patients in the intermediate high and high risk population. The diagnose and treatment of the patients is fixed to the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) recommendations of the cardiology society of 2019 Guidelines on Acute Pulmonary Embolism (Diagnosis and Management of Pulmonary Embolism).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTblood samplesTaking blood samples (plasma, serum) and measure the level of Adrenomedullin

Timeline

Start date
2020-08-19
Primary completion
2023-05-08
Completion
2023-05-08
First posted
2021-05-06
Last updated
2023-05-11

Locations

2 sites across 2 countries: Austria, Hungary

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04875130. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Adrenomedullin in Context With Pulmonary Embolism (NCT04875130) · Clinical Trials Directory