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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06787430

Effects of Nicorandil on Microvascular Dysfunction in Patients With STEMI Undergoing Primary PCI

Evaluating the Effects of Nicorandil on Microvascular Dysfunction in Patients With ST-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction Undergoing Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
170 (estimated)
Sponsor
China National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Despite the success of restoration of epicardial blood flow by the primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI), approximately one half of patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) have failed myocardial reperfusion, namely microvascular dysfunction. Previous studies have shown that coronary microvascular damage significantly impacts the prognosis of patients with STEMI. Therefore, restoration of microvascular function is quite important during the PPCI procedures. Recent clinical trials found that nicorandil, a hybrid ATP-sensitive potassium channel opening agent, improved microvascular function, prevented no-reflow phenomenon, and had beneficial cardioprotective effects in patients receiving PPCI. However, there was a lack of evidence on the protective effects of nicorandil on microvascular function. The coronary angiography-derived IMR (AMR) is a novel wire-free technology developed for fast computation of IMR in patients undergoing coronary angiography, thereby enabling the quantification of coronary microcirculation of patients. This study is aimed to investigate the effects of nicorandil on microvascular dysfunction as evaluated by AMR in patients with STEMI.

Detailed description

This study is aimed to investigate the effects of nicorandil on microvascular dysfunction as evaluated by AMR in patients with STEMI. This study is a prospective, single-center, double-blind, randomized controlled study, evaluate the effects of nicorandil on nicorandil on microvascular dysfunction in patients with STEMI undergoing primary PCI. The inclusion criteria are as following: Age between 18-80; Diagnosis of STEMI and indicating for primary PCI; Diagnostic coronary angiography showed definite culprit vessel and primary PCI was planned to treat the culprit vessel; Reference vessel diameter of culprit vessel was greater than 2.0 mm; There was no flow-limiting stenosis for the non-culprit vessels; Understand the aim of this trial and agree to sign the informed consent form. The exclusion criteria are as following: Acute in- stent thrombosis or in-stent stenosis lesions of culprit vessel; Balloon angioplasty rather than stent was planned for the culprit vessel; Allergic to nicorandil or systolic arterial pressure was less than 85mmHg before procedure; Vessel with twisted shape that was unable to be measured using AMR; Oral or intravenous use of nicorandil within one month; Cardiac shock needing mechanical support; Severely hepatic dysfunction; Severely renal failure needing hemodialysis; Contraindicated for coronary angiography or primary PCI; Culprit vessels of left main or graft vessels; Pregnant or nursing; Others that investigators think should excluded. Patients were randomized into nicorandil group and control group with ratio of 1:1. In the nicorandil group, intracoronary nicorandil 3mg dissolved in 3ml saline was given within 30 seconds at two time points, one was when the guidewire or ballon passed the lesion and the blood flow was regained, and another was the time before the stent was implanted. In the control group, 3ml saline was given intracoronary through the guiding catheter within 30 seconds at the same time points in nicorandil group. All the procedure details including strategies, decision of intravascular imaging, other medications during procedures were decided by operators. The angiography-derived microcirculatory resistance (AMR) is a wire-free and adenosine-free index, which aims at providing a valid alternative to invasive wire-based IMR assessment.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGnicorandilIn the nicorandil group, intracoronary nicorandil 3mg dissolved in 3ml saline was given within 30 seconds at two time points, one was when the guidewire or ballon passed the lesion and the blood flow was regained, and another was the time before the stent was implanted.
DRUGSaline (NaCl 0,9 %) (placebo)In the control group, 3ml saline was given intracoronary through the guiding catheter within 30 seconds at the same time points in nicorandil group.

Timeline

Start date
2026-03-01
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2027-12-31
First posted
2025-01-22
Last updated
2026-03-12

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06787430. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.