Myocardial Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Reappraisal of Glucose-insulin-potassium Therapy in Acute St-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction by Pre-hospital Administration
The purpose of this study is:
1. to assess whether pre-hospital glucose-insulin-potassium (GIK) administration in acute
STEMI patients would reduce infarct size and ischemia/reperfusion damage using
comprehensive tissue characterization by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) at an
early post-infarction phase.
2. to explore the putative cardioprotective mechanisms of pre-hospital GIK administration
Background - After an acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), early and
successful myocardial reperfusion with primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is
the most effective strategy for reducing the infarct size and improving clinical outcome.
The process of restoring blood flow to the ischemic myocardium, however, can induce injury
per se, paradoxically increasing the extent of final infarction (i.e., reperfusion injury).
Research has been focusing for years on a strategy to effectively counteract reperfusion
injury and, thereby, reduce the final infarct size with salutary effects on clinical
outcome. Robust experimental evidences support Glucose-Insulin-Potassium (GIK) as an
effective cardioprotective agent being capable to metabolically protect the myocardium
against ischemia and ischemia/reperfusion injury. These benefits are clearly related to the
time that GIK is administered in the course of cardiac ischemia, with effectiveness
increasing with early administration. However, clinical trials in the reperfusion era have
lost the opportunity to translate the beneficial effects seen in the laboratory to the
clinical setting, because of the unacceptably prolonged delay from the onset of ischemic
symptoms to GIK administration. A properly-designed prospective trial with double-blinded
randomization to placebo or GIK in the out-of-hospital setting would straightforwardly
overcome this limitation, thereby providing convincing evidences in favor or disfavor of GIK
treatment. Notable, GIK is an un-expensive compound, and upon the verification of its
efficacy, GIK treatment would be ready for primetime clinical application with matchless
cost/effectiveness profile.
Aims
1. to assess whether pre-hospital GIK administration in acute STEMI patients would reduce
infarct size and ischemia/reperfusion damage using comprehensive tissue
characterization by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) at an early post-infarction
phase.
2. to explore the putative cardioprotective mechanisms of pre-hospital GIK administration
Methods - The investigators will conduct a single-center randomized, placebo-controlled,
double-blinded trial for testing the efficacy of pre-hospital GIK administration in patients
with acutely reperfused STEMI. The pre-specified primary end-point is the reduction of
infarct size, as quantitated by late gadolinium enhancement CMR in the early post-infarction
phase. Major secondary end-points are: 1) reduction of ischemia/reperfusion injury
quantitated by CMR, and 2) investigation of the putative cardioprotective mechanisms ofGIK
treatment in subjects with acute STEMI.
Outlook: The investigators study results, if positive, will persuade the scientific
community to reconsider pre-hospital GIK treatment as adjunctive to primary PCI in acute
STEMI patients and revitalize the field of metabolism-based cardioprotection. They will
illustrate by which mechanisms cardioprotection is achieved in the clinical setting,
prompting large prospective multicentre trials to test the efficacy of pre-hospital GIK
administration on hard clinical end-points.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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