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Coronary Artery Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Coronary Artery Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT04298307 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Registry of Coronary Lithotripsy in Spain.

REPLICA
Start date: May 4, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The REPLICA TRIAL tries to assess the intracoronary lithotripsy safety and efficacy profiles in real-world patients with calcified coronary artery disease.

NCT ID: NCT04290091 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Detection of Coronary Artery Disease With Micro Electro-Mechanical Sensors

DECADE
Start date: January 29, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to validate the sensor data of gyroscope and accelerometer in detection of hemodynamically significant CAD.

NCT ID: NCT04286295 Terminated - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Cytisine Compared to Combination NRT in Relapsed Smokers

CYTvsNRT+
Start date: March 14, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cigarette smoking causes cardiovascular disease (CVD) yet many smokers with CVD are unable to quit despite strong desire to do so. Within 90 days of discharge, about 30% of smokers have returned to daily smoking and almost 60% have relapsed by 1 year. Patients with CVD who resume smoking are more likely to experience new events (e.g. heart attack or stroke) or die. New approaches are required. A new type of cessation product is a plant-based medication called Cytisine. Cytisine is taken orally over 25 days and reduces the pleasurable sensations that smokers get from cigarettes and reduces withdrawal symptoms. The primary research question is whether or not it is feasible to conduct a large-scale trial of the effectiveness of this product compared to conventional nicotine replacement therapy in smokers who have failed to quit using conventional methods. To determine feasibility, a pilot study will be conducted of sixty smokers (30 men, 30 women) with CVD who have been treated for smoking cessation but have relapsed within 90 days of discharge. Participants will complete a baseline assessment and will be randomly assigned to either the combination nicotine replacement therapy group (patch plus lozenge) or cytisine group. Participants will be treated for 25 days and then will return to UOHI so adherence to treatment and smoking status can be assessed. Feasibility of the larger trial will be based on: the recruitment rates; adherence to assigned treatments; dropout rates; and differences in 25-day quit rates between groups.

NCT ID: NCT04285372 Active, not recruiting - Coronary Disease Clinical Trials

Keep bIfurcation Single Stenting Simple

KISS
Start date: August 3, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

KISS study is an investigator-initiated, multi-centre, prospective, randomized (1:1), parallel, two-arm, non-inferiority trial aiming to compare two bifurcation PCI procedures for Side Branch protection

NCT ID: NCT04283734 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Instantaneous Wave Free Ratio

Usefulness of the Use of Co-registration Strategy With iFR in Long and/or Diffuse Coronary Lesions

iLARDI
Start date: February 11, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Randomized controlled trial to determinate if the physiological iFR pullback evaluation with Syncvision software (intervention group) could be useful in the reduction of stent length implanted, with the potencial benefit in terms of MACEs reduction at follow-up with respect to angiographic guiding of percutaneous coronary intervention (control group).

NCT ID: NCT04282148 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Abbott Next Generation Drug Eluting Stent 48mm Study

SPIRIT 48
Start date: June 17, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this SPIRIT 48 study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the ABT NG DES 48 in improving coronary artery luminal diameter in subjects with coronary artery disease (CAD) due to de novo native coronary artery long lesions.

NCT ID: NCT04280575 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Symptomatic Trial of Angina Assessment Prior to Revascularization

ORBITA-STAR
Start date: January 16, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The principal objective of this research is to determine whether symptoms, induced by confirmed experimental ischaemia, can help us predict which patients will respond to PCI.

NCT ID: NCT04279496 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Coronary CT Angiography Evaluation for Clinical Outcomes: An International Multicenter Registry

CONFIRM2
Start date: June 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The overall objective of CONFIRM2 is to perform the largest cardiovascular phenotype outcomes study ever.

NCT ID: NCT04276389 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

OCT- Versus Angiography-guided Paclitaxel Drug-Coated Balloon Angioplasty in De Novo Coronary Artery

Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

OCT allows precise evaluation of intimal injury after lesion preparation and may improve the acute results and long-term outcomes after paclitaxel drug-coated balloon angioplasty. This prospective multicenter cohort study aims to assess the efficacy and safety of OCT- versus angiography-guided paclitaxel drug-coated balloon angioplasty in middle-sized de novo coronary artery after lesion preparation with scoring balloon.

NCT ID: NCT04272060 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Ultra-high-resolution CT vs. Conventional Angiography for Detecting Coronary Heart Disease

Start date: November 22, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cardiac catheterization with invasive coronary angiography is the gold standard for determining the presence or absence of significant coronary heart disease (CHD). However, cardiac catheterization is costly and, as an invasive procedure, it is associated with some risk of adverse events, rarely even stroke, myocardial infarction, or death. Recent advances in multi-detector computed tomography angiography (CTA) have allowed rapid, noninvasive coronary artery imaging in patients with suspected CHD. CTA generally yields high accuracy for identifying patients with CHD when compared to cardiac catheterization. However, diagnostic accuracy is reduced in the setting of severe coronary artery calcification and coronary stents due to its inferior spatial resolution compared to cardiac catheterization. Because high-risk patients often have severe coronary calcification or stents, the application of CTA has been particularly limited in this important patient group. Recently, an ultrahigh-resolution CT scanner was released which has shown promise to overcome the limitation of conventional CTA in the setting of severe coronary artery calcification or stents. This ultrahigh-resolution "precision" CT scanner (UHR-CT) contains detector rows with half the width than currently available systems (0.25 mm vs. 0.5 mm) resulting in approximately twice the spatial resolution. The purpose of this investigation is to test the hypothesis that high-resolution CTA is not inferior to the current standard of cardiac catheterization for identifying significant CHD in patients with high-risk characteristics, including severe coronary artery calcification and coronary stents. The investigators propose to enroll 50 patients over 24-30 months in this investigation as part of a multicenter study. Patients referred for cardiac catheterization with known CHD and suspected obstructive coronary artery stenosis will be included. All patients will undergo both cardiac catheterization and UHR-CT for determining significant CHD as defined by coronary functional assessment. The primary end point will be the diagnostic accuracy by area-under-curve (AUC) method for identifying patients with hemodynamically significant CHD.