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UnknownNCT05438030

Diastolic Function Assessment With Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
37 (estimated)
Sponsor
Imperial College London · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging is excellent at assessing the contractility of the heart muscle. However, relatively little is known about CMR's ability to assess the relaxation (diastolic function) of the heart between heart beats, where echocardiography remains the gold standard. This is important because in 30% of heart failure patients the overwhelming problem is diastolic dysfunction, and so they often need both tests. The investigators wish to investigate how to best make measurements using CMR to identify those with impaired diastolic function, in the context of the current gold standard test (echocardiography).

Detailed description

37 participants will be recruited, comprising a mix of patients with diastolic heart dysfunction and health controls. The diseased cohort will comprise patients with preserved systolic function and known raised B-type natriuretic peptide levels (BNP, a blood test indicating raised pressures in the heart) from cardiology clinics who are undergoing a clinical CMR scan. The healthy controls will comprise patients also undergoing MRI scans, but who are strongly expected not to have heart diastolic disease - for example, patients undergoing MRI scans for family screening but displaying no symptoms or other abnormal tests. BNP blood testing will not be necessary for the healthy control arm. If a participant in the health control arm is found to have diastolic dysfunction, they will be eligible to cross over to the diseased group, after discussing their results with their physician. At this point, a BNP level will be checked if the patient is happy to continue in the study. The criteria for crossover this will be Grade 2 or greater diastolic dysfunction as per the British Society of Echocardiography Diastolic Dysfunction guidelines. If the BNP level is not raised, despite meeting imaging criteria for diastolic dysfunction, the patient will not be eligible for the full analysis and the second visit will not be performed. Patients in the diseased cohort will represent a range of pathologies that typically cause HFPEF (heart failure with preserved ejection fraction), including hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, aortic stenosis, and cardiac amyloidosis. On the same day as their clinical CMR scan, participants will undergo a focused research echocardiogram which will include quantification of left atrium size, trans-mitral Doppler, tissue Doppler imaging and global longitudinal strain (GLS). All measurements will be performed in both left lateral decubitus positioning (typical for echocardiography) and supine positioning (typical for CMR). Participants will then undergo their clinical CMR scan. After their CMR scan, patients will then undergo repeat focused echocardiography. When patients return for their clinical follow-up, they will undergo a repeat focused echocardiogram and 15-minute research CMR scan. This design allows the agreement between each CMR and echocardiographic measure of diastolic function to be assessed. More importantly, this agreement can be described in the context of: 1. Changes in diastolic function parameters due to patient positioning 2. Changes in diastolic function parameters during a scan, e.g. due to the patient relaxing 3. Each modality's test re-test reproducibility over two timescales (less than 1 hour versus several weeks).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTCardiac MRI scanUndertaken at the radiology department at Hammersmith Hospital. The scan will be performed by the MRI radiographers, under the supervision of a consultant radiologist or cardiologist.
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTEchocardiogram scanUndertaken at the Peart Rose research unit, by a British Society of Echocardiography accredited sonographer.

Timeline

Start date
2022-09-01
Primary completion
2023-12-01
Completion
2024-06-01
First posted
2022-06-29
Last updated
2023-03-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05438030. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.