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RecruitingNCT05776810

Syncope Trial to Understand Tilt Testing or ECG Recording Tenth Prevention of Syncope Trial

Syncope Trial to Understand Tilt Testing or ECG Recording. Tenth Prevention of Syncope

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
144 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Calgary · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
50 Years – 110 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The Study To Understand Tilt Tests versus Extended Recordings (STUTTER, POST 10) will test the hypothesis that first performing a diagnostic HUT in older patients with syncope of unknown cause will provide earlier and more diagnoses than inserting an ICM.

Detailed description

A total of 144 patients ≥50 years old with ≥1 syncopal spell in the preceding year who lack a clear etiologic diagnosis for syncope and no clinically apparent structural heart disease will be randomized to first undergo HUT or to first receive an ICM in an open label, parallel group study. The primary outcome measure will be the establishment of a documented etiologic diagnosis of the cause of syncope, defined below. This will be a formal pragmatic study of two diagnostic strategies, designed around the PRECIS2 criteria. The key question addresses which test should be done first, and beyond that care will be left in the hands of the specialist physician with primary responsibility for assessing and managing syncope. This is a Pragmatic Trial, which is a rigorous randomized trial method that enables the study of interventions in the real world. Pragmatic trials are designed to determine the effects of an intervention under the usual conditions in which it will be applied, in contrast to conventional explanatory biomedical trials that are designed to determine the effects of an intervention under ideal circumstances. The researcher's touchstone is usual syncope specialist management. There are 9 criteria of the PRECIS2 tool for pragmatic trials:1) similarity of eligibility criteria to usual care, 2) no extra recruitment effort, 3) similar setting to usual care, 4) similar health care organization and delivery to usual care, 5) similar flexibility to usual care, 6) similar flexibility in patient monitoring, 7) similar follow-up intensity to usual care, 8) direct relevance of primary outcome to participants, and 9) completeness of data inclusion. Each criterion is scored 1-5; the researchers provide these scores for each criterion. Study design and conduct are designed to resemble real clinical practice with its variable conduct and decision-making. The primary outcome is establishing a diagnosis by one of two recommended methods, and both methods have evidence-based criteria. the researchers will issue a brochure to remind investigators of the guidelines' criteria. Both have objective ECG criteria and tilt tests have BP criteria. Bias is a concern, and the Outcomes Adjudication Committee will adjudicate post hoc all results blindly.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTDiagnostic Test: Head Up Tilt Table (HUT)Participant randomized to open-label diagnostic strategy. Results and all follow-up care to be in the hands of treating cardiologist as this is a pragmatic study. the early HUT \[protocol: supine pre-tilt phase 5 min, un-medicated HUT to 70 degrees for 20 minutes; if response negative then 400 μg of sublingual nitroglycerin and continued 70 degree tilt for 20 minutes\]
DEVICEDevice: Implantable Loop RecorderILR is a small subcutaneously implanted device, lasting up to 3 years, that records heart rhythms, and which may be either auto-triggered or patientactivated.

Timeline

Start date
2023-05-01
Primary completion
2026-12-31
Completion
2026-12-31
First posted
2023-03-20
Last updated
2024-12-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05776810. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.