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UnknownNCT05084157

Long-term Echocardiographic Findings in Takotsubo Syndrome

Prospective, Multicentre, International, Registry of LONG-term Findings at Cardiac Imaging in TAKotsubo SyndromE (The LONG-TAKE Registry)

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
500 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Roma La Sapienza · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is characterized by severe left ventricular (LV) dysfunction that gradually recovers, thus leading to the commonly accepted belief that it is a transient and self-limiting condition. Histologically, TTS can be accompanied by severe morphological alterations potentially resulting from catecholamine excess followed by microcirculatory dysfunction and direct cardiotoxicity. The affected myocardium, however, has a high potential of structural reconstitution which correlates with the rapid functional recovery. The lack of persistent morphological changes in TTS has been confirmed by original CMR studies which pointed out that the acute phase of the disease is characterized only by remarkable myocardial edema with no evidence of significant late gadolinium enhancement. Indeed, the absence of LGE in TTS patients has become a common diagnostic criterion in most CMR centers. Although some studies have challenged this notion by reporting delayed hyper-enhancement in TTS patients, the intensity and extent of LGE in the acute phase of TTS are less than usually reported in studies of myocardial infarction. The long-term clinical and functional consequences of an acute episode of TTS are still unclear. A recent spectroscopic investigation has shown that long-term (\>1 year) abnormalities in cardiac energetic persist after an acute episode of TTS. Also, a few patients with residual wall motion abnormality in whom LGE fails to resolve (suggesting the acute event resulted in frank infarction) have been reported. However, how often persistent morphologic abnormalities are present after the index episode remains undefined. The possibility exists that fibrosis was undetected at follow-up CMR studies using conventional LGE threshold methods due to the fact that myocardial injury is subtler and there are no confidently recognizable reference regions of normal myocardium. Newer echocardiographic tools (i.e. tissue Doppler) have now the potential to detect persistence of post-TTS LV function abnormalities.

Detailed description

Objective of the study The aim of this study is to assess the frequency of long-term (\>12 months) morphologic abnormalities at cardiac imaging after an index episode of TTS, and their possible correlation with presenting features and long-term outcome Study Population The registry will enrol consecutive patients with TS who have undergone echocardiography either at entry and during follow-up (\>12 months). Registry Design This is a non-interventional, multi-centre, registry of male and female patients with TTS who undergo follow-up echocardiography after the index event. Rationale This large global registry focuses on long-term findings in TTS patients. The registry is observational, and decisions on patient management are determined by the health care professional and the patient and not by the protocol. Patients are therefore treated according to normal local practice. Source Data: Data will be derived from the patients clinical records according to specifications outlined in the electronic case report form. This Registry will not undertake any experimental intervention with patients being treated according to normal local practice. No additional tests or procedures are required by the protocol. Physicians involved in initial diagnosis of TTS in patients may transfer or refer the cases to other physicians who will treat and follow up the patients in the long-term.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTEchocardiographyPatients will undergo Doppler echocardiography

Timeline

Start date
2022-02-01
Primary completion
2022-10-30
Completion
2023-10-30
First posted
2021-10-19
Last updated
2022-01-25

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05084157. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.