Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Surgical Treatment for Ischemic Heart Failure (STICH)
This study will compare medical therapy with coronary bypass surgery and/or surgical ventricular reconstruction for patients with congestive heart failure and coronary artery disease (CAD).
BACKGROUND:
Congestive heart failure afflicts approximately five million Americans and is the leading
cause of hospitalization in Americans over the age of 65. Most cases of congestive heart
failure are due to CAD. Surprisingly little is known about the relative benefits of medical
versus surgical therapy for patients with obstructive coronary disease and congestive heart
failure. Randomized studies of medical therapy versus bypass surgery for obstructive coronary
disease were conducted in the 1970s and did not include the systematic use of aspirin,
arterial conduits, or lipid-lowering medications. In addition, patients with ejection
fractions below 35% were specifically excluded from the three large randomized studies of
medical therapy versus bypass surgery. While observational data from the 1970s and early
1980s suggest a survival advantage associated with bypass surgery in patients with low
ejection fraction and congestive heart failure, biases favoring the referral of the fittest
of such patients for bypass surgery may have confounded these comparisons. In addition,
medical therapy for congestive heart failure has improved dramatically over the past two
decades. Thus, the choice of medical therapy versus bypass surgery for patients with
congestive heart failure and obstructive coronary disease is usually decided by guesswork.
This study is designed to provide a solid answer.
PURPOSE:
STICH is a multicenter, international, randomized trial that addresses two specific primary
hypotheses in patients with clinical heart failure (HF) and left ventricular (LV) dysfunction
who have coronary artery disease amenable to surgical revascularization.
The first hypothesis is that restoration of blood flow by means of coronary revascularization
recovers chronic LV dysfunction and improves survival, as compared to intensive medical
therapy alone. The second hypothesis is that surgical ventricular restoration (SVR) to a more
normal LV size improves survival free of subsequent hospitalization for cardiac cause
compared to CABG alone.
Patients eligible for either medical therapy or CABG, but not eligible for the SVR procedure
(Stratum A), will be randomized in equal proportions to medical therapy alone versus CABG
plus medical therapy. Patients eligible for all three therapies (Stratum B) will be
randomized in equal proportions to medical therapy alone, CABG plus medical therapy, and CABG
plus SVR plus medical therapy. Patients whose severity of angina or CAD makes them
inappropriate for medical therapy alone (Stratum C) will be randomized in equal proportions
to CABG plus medical therapy versus CABG plus SVR plus medical therapy.
The overall target was to recruit 1200 patients into Hypothesis One and 1,000 patients into
Hypothesis Two. Secondary endpoints include the role of myocardial viability, morbidity,
economics, and quality of life. Core laboratories for quality of life/economics, cardiac
magnetic resonance (CMR), echocardiography (ECHO), neurohormonal/cytokine/genetic (NCG), and
radionuclide (RN) studies ensure consistent testing practices and standardization of data
necessary to identify eligible patients and to address specific questions related to the
stated hypotheses.
IMPORTANCE OF RESEARCH:
The most common cause of HF is no longer hypertension or valvular heart disease as it was in
previous decades, but rather CAD. HF is a common worldwide disease and CAD is a frequent
cause of HF initiation and progression. HF is responsible for approximately 1 million
hospitalizations and 300,000 fatalities annually. The prevalence of HF is increasing, largely
due to enhanced survival following acute myocardial infarction and other manifestations of
CAD. No randomized trial has ever compared directly the long-term benefits of surgical,
medical, or combined surgical and medical treatment of patients with ischemic HF. The STICH
trial is the first trial to compare the long term benefits of surgical and medical treatment
in patients with ischemic HF. Although modern medical therapy for HF modestly improves
quality of life, a more aggressive approach with the surgical therapies being studied in the
STICH trial may produce even greater improvements. The common clinical practice of not
offering CABG to patients with LV dysfunction in regions found to be nonviable on noninvasive
studies is not evidence-based. Since only those patients for whom intensive medical therapy
is the only reasonable therapeutic alternative are excluded from this study, the results of
the STICH trial should be applicable to most patients with CAD, HF, and systolic LV
dysfunction. The results of the STICH trial will also establish whether measurements of
neurohormonal and cytokine levels and genetic profiling are useful for directing patient
management decisions, for monitoring the effectiveness of therapy, and for refining the
optimal approach for selecting the treatment strategy most likely to be effective for the
many of these patients.
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