Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Functional Mitral Regurgitation in STICH
The Transesophageal Echocardiography (TEE) Surgical Treatment of Ischemic Heart Failure (STICH) ancillary study will define the mechanism(s) of functional mitral regurgitation (MR) by TEE in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy, and the impact of therapy (medical, coronary artery bypass grafting [CABG], or CABG plus surgical ventricular restoration [SVR]) on mechanism and severity of MR. Severity of the effect of functional MR on clinical outcomes will also be examined. The TEE STICH study will address four specific aims that will focus on defining the following: 1) the mechanism(s) of functional MR in ischemic cardiomyopathy; 2) the effect of therapy on the mechanism and severity of functional MR; 3) myocardial viability on functional MR and its response to treatment; and 4) the effect of MR on prognosis in ischemic cardiomyopathy.
BACKGROUND:
Functional MR is a common complication of ischemic heart disease. Two large studies have
confirmed an adverse effect of functional MR on survival after a heart attack. However,
studies in heart failure (HF) are small and mainly limited to patients with non-ischemic
cardiomyopathy. Recent animal studies have challenged the traditional concept that
functional MR is a consequence of mitral annular dilation, instead suggesting that
functional MR is due to leaflet tethering by outward expansion of the left ventricular wall
(LV remodeling). This has critical implications regarding the correct surgical approach to
correcting functional MR. To date, no large prospective study has examined the mechanism(s)
of functional MR in ischemic cardiomyopathy, nor has the interaction between mechanism and
prognosis been explored. This is a crucial knowledge gap because: 1) 70% of HF cases are
caused by ischemic heart disease; and 2) functional MR occurs in around 60% of patients with
ischemic cardiomyopathy. This study aims to fill these gaps by defining the mechanism(s) of
functional MR by TEE in a large clinical trial of patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy
participating in the STICH study. The STICH study will address the following two key
hypotheses of therapeutic strategy in the management of patients with symptomatic HF, LV
dysfunction, and coronary artery disease (CAD) amenable to CABG: 1) surgical coronary
revascularization, in addition to aggressive medical HF management, will have long-term
mortality, morbidity, quality of life, or cost benefits beyond aggressive medical management
alone; and 2) early surgical ventricular shape restoration (SVR) in combination with CABG
will improve outcome compared to coronary revascularization alone and medical therapy alone.
The study will also address the role of LV size and function, including myocardial viability
as a predictor of subsequent events over 3 years.
The STICH study affords a unique opportunity to specifically evaluate the mechanism and
prognosis of functional MR in a large group of patients with HF due to ischemic
cardiomyopathy. The study design of STICH allows exploring the interactions between the
mechanism of functional MR, therapy, and prognosis. For example, it is not known whether all
patients with functional MR have an adverse prognosis or whether their prognosis is related
to specific mechanisms or severity. In patients undergoing CABG, it is not known which
patients with functional MR will require valve repair or which ones will do well without it.
It is also not known whether SVR reduces MR severity more than medical therapy and by what
mechanism. It is possible that improvement in functional MR is a consequence of reversed LV
remodeling, which is known to be related to myocardial viability, independent of specific
therapy. These important questions are addressed by the TEE STICH study, an ancillary study
to the STICH study.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The following four specific aims will be tested.
Specific Aim 1: This study will define the mechanism of functional MR in ischemic
cardiomyopathy. Null Hypothesis: There is no difference in measurements of the mitral valve
apparatus known to be associated with functional MR in ischemic cardiomyopathy among
patients with different degrees of functional MR. To test this hypothesis, this study will
compare measurements of annulus size and leaflet tethering in three groups of patients,
those without MR, those with mild MR (effective regurgitant orifice area [EROA] less than
0.2 cm²), and those with at least moderate MR (EROA less than 0.2 cm²). The six specific
measurements of MR mechanism include the following: 1) diastolic mitral annulus area; 2)
percent of systolic annular contraction; 3) leaflet tenting area; 4) papillary muscle
tethering distance; 5) papillary muscle separation distance; and 6) the primary chordal
separation angle.
Specific Aim 2: This study will define the effect of therapy on mechanism and severity of
functional MR. Null Hypothesis: There will be no difference in measurements of the mechanism
and severity of moderate functional MR before and after treatment in the three treatment
groups (medicine, CABG, and CABG plus SVR). To test this hypothesis, this study will compare
the change in measurements of MR mechanism (see above list) and severity (EROA and volume of
the chest wall [VCW]) before and at a 2-year follow-up in the three treatment groups. The
primary endpoint for this analysis will be long-term survival.
Specific Aim 3: This study will evaluate the effect of functional MR on prognosis. Null
Hypothesis: The presence and severity of functional MR does not predict the following: 1)
long-term survival; and 2) the combined endpoint of death, cardiac transplantation,
automatic implantable cardioverter defibrillator (AICD) countershock, hospitalization due to
heart failure, or subsequent mitral valve repair or replacement.
Specific Aim 4: This study will evaluate the effect of myocardial viability on mechanism of
functional MR. Null Hypothesis: The mechanism of moderate MR will be no different in
patients with or without myocardial viability by single photon emission computed tomography
(SPECT) imaging. All patients who have undergone SPECT imaging done as part of the parent
study will be studied. The grouping variables will be the presence or absence of myocardial
viability as determined by the SPECT core lab.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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