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RecruitingNCT06066970

Cardiac Biomarkers for the Quantification of Myocardial Damage After Cardiac Surgery

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
Jena University Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of the study is to clarify whether the perioperative release of the cardiac biomarkers troponin I, troponin T and CK-MB consistently correlate with visualizable myocardial damage, and to what extent these biomarkers are comparable by means of their kinetics and dynamics. Due to the uncertainty regarding the validity of cardiac biomarkers in the diagnosis of myocardial infarction, the answer to these questions could have a considerable influence on internationally valid guidelines and definitions. International studies, especially in the field of coronary surgery and coronary artery disease treatment refer to these definitions, in particular, the adequate treatment of affected patients is directly dependent on them.

Detailed description

In the course of a myocardial infarction, the death of cardiomyocytes leads to the release of specific cardiac biomarkers (CK-MB, troponin I and T). Since there is a general risk of perioperative infarction in cardiac surgery, the standard monitoring includes appropriate diagnostics. These are based on clinical symptoms, ECG, imaging (echocardiography or coronary angiography) and, in particular, the elevation of these cardiac biomarkers. Recently, the latter have been regularly moved into the foreground as the sole indicators of perioperative myocardial infarction, and first definitions allow the diagnosis solely based on troponin or CK-MB elevation. However, biomarker elevations may not be accompanied by an image-morphologically detectable perfusion defect (myocardial infarction). Such phenomena have been described outside of cardiac surgery, for example, in marathon runners4, but also due to comorbidities such as renal insufficiency or neurological diseases. Even in patients undergoing cardiac surgery without coronary artery disease (e.g., isolated valve surgery), biomarker elevations up to the infarct-defining range are regularly observed. Whether in the latter case the perioperative routinely observed troponin or CK-MB elevation are indeed related to surgery-induced chronic perfusion disturbance has not yet been investigated. To date, there is no study that quantitatively correlates purely perioperatively induced ischemic damage with the release of cardiac biomarkers. In addition, the three most commonly used biomarkers for perioperative infarct diagnosis differ considerably in their temporal release and release dynamics. Moreover, a direct comparison of all three parameters has never been performed so far. Therefore, the aim of this study is to quantify and compare the release of troponin T, I and CK/CK-MB in the postoperative course in patients without relevant coronary artery disease undergoing elective isolated heart valve surgery. These findings will subsequently be correlated with classical diagnostics (clinic, ECG, echocardiography) and image morphological quantification of perioperatively induced myocardial damage by magnetic resonance imaging (LGE-cMRI).

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2023-09-05
Primary completion
2025-09-01
Completion
2025-12-31
First posted
2023-10-04
Last updated
2025-09-26

Locations

5 sites across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06066970. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.