Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05640752

Optimal Evaluation to Reduce Cardiovascular Imaging Testing

Optimal Evaluation of Stable Chest Pain to Reduce Unnecessary Utilization of Cardiac Imaging Testing

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
800 (estimated)
Sponsor
Tianjin Chest Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
30 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In daily clinical routine, the evaluation of new-onset and stable chest pain (SCP) suggestive of chronic coronary syndrome (CCS) remains a challenge for physicians. Although coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) seems to be the first-line cardiac imaging testing (CIT) according to the recommendations from current guidelines, the optimal diagnostic strategy to identify low risk patients who may derive minimal benefit from further CIT is the cornerstone of clinical management for SCP. Recently, different diagnostic strategies were provided to effectively defer unnecessary CIT, but few studies have prospectively determined the actual effect of applying these strategies in clinical practice. Therefore, the OPERATE study was designed to compare the effectiveness and safety of two proposed diagnostic strategies in identification of low risk individual who may derive minimal benefit from CCTA among patients with SCP suggestive of CCS in a pragmatic randomized controlled trial (RCT).

Detailed description

OPERATE trial was an investigator-initiated, multicenter, prospective, CCTA-based, 2-arm 1:1 parallel-group, double-blind and pragmatic RCT planned to include 800 subjects with SCP suggestive of CCS. Subjects were assigned randomly to two groups: 1) 2016 National Institutes for Clinical Excellence guidelines-determined diagnostic strategy (NICE strategy) and 2) 2019 European Society of Cardiology guidelines-determined diagnostic strategy (ESC strategy) The primary objective of OPERATE trial is to compare the rates of CCTA without obstructive CAD according to NICE and ESC strategy. The key secondary objective is to assess whether the two strategies have no significant difference in terms of major adverse cardiac events (MACE). The investigators hypothesize that when comparing with NICE strategy, ESC strategy which sequentially incorporated the ESC-PTP model with RF-CL model will decrease the probability of CCTA without obstructive CAD but not at the expense of safety and cost over a follow-up period of 1 year.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TEST2019 ESC guideline-determined diagnostic strategyESC-PTP is calculated using age, sex and type of chest pain according to 2019 ESC guideline for the diagnosis and management of CCS and RF-CL is calculated using age, sex, type of chest pain, hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, smoking and family history of CAD based on the publication of Winther et al., respectively. According to ESC strategy, subjects with ESC-PTP ≤5% are classified into low risk group and ones with ESC-PTP ≥15% are classified into high risk group. For subjects with ESC-PTP of 5%-15%, ones with RF-CL ≥15% are classified into high risk group and ones with RF-CL \<15% are classified into low risk group. CCTA should be referred for a subject in high risk group. Subjects determined to be at low risk will be referred to optimal medication treatment with no immediate CCTA.
DIAGNOSTIC_TEST2016 NICE guideline-determined diagnostic strategyFor subjects assigned to NICE strategy, ones with nonanginal chest pain and normal ECG were classified into low risk group and ones with typical and atypical angina or nonanginal chest pain with abnormal ECG were classified into high risk group. Subjects determined to be at low risk will be referred to optimal medication treatment with no immediate CCTA.

Timeline

Start date
2023-12-11
Primary completion
2024-12-11
Completion
2025-12-11
First posted
2022-12-07
Last updated
2024-12-24

Locations

4 sites across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05640752. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.