Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05519735

Lymphatic Organs and Myocardium After Myocardial Infarction

Multimodal Characterization of Lymphatic Organs and Myocardium in Patients After Acute Myocardial Infarction

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
57 (estimated)
Sponsor
Wuerzburg University Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The adaptive immune response plays an important role in myocardial healing and remodeling after acute myocardial infarction in patients. Therefore, the involved lymphocytes represent a novel target for therapeutic interventions. However, there are no established blood-derived biomarkers to predict the quantity and quality of the adaptive immune response to cardiac injury. Multimodal imaging of the heart and immunologic organs might provide such information. Recent retrospective analysis of patients after MI revealed enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes associated with increased CXCR4 radiotracer accumulation, thereby indicating that CXCR4 PET-based lymph node imaging provides a non-invasive quantitative readout of the local adaptive immune response. These considerations are further fuelled by the fact that, within lymph nodes, CXCR4 is expressed almost exclusively on lymphocytes, whereas various other cell types express CXCR4 within the myocardium. This leads to the hypothesis that the size of mediastinal lymph nodes and their respective CXCR4 PET signals correlate with the adaptive immune response to cardiac injury and might provide predictive information for functional cardiac decline during follow-up. This prospective clinical study will use multimodal imaging to monitor chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4) expression in the lymph nodes, myocardium, spleen, and bone marrow after acute MI. The combination of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), echocardiography, and positron emission tomography (PET) along with blood collection for immunophenotyping will allow to determine i) if the size of mediastinal lymph nodes and their respective PET-derived CXCR4 signals at baseline correlate with the adaptive immune response to acute cardiac injury; and ii) if they predict cardiac adverse remodelling during longitudinal follow-up.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTMultimodality ImagingPatients receive CXCR4-targeted PET/CT, CMR and Echo

Timeline

Start date
2022-04-01
Primary completion
2025-12-01
Completion
2026-12-01
First posted
2022-08-29
Last updated
2023-05-25

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05519735. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.