ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prospective Randomized Controlled Clinical Study to Compare Abciximab-bolus i.v. Versus i.c. in Primary PCI in Patients With Acute ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction
The purpose of this study is to examine whether intracoronary abciximab bolus application with subsequent 12 hour intravenous infusion in addition to primary percutaneous coronary intervention is beneficial for patients with STEMI in comparison to standard i.v. bolus application with respect to 90-day mortality, reinfarction and new congestive heart failure.
In patients with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) primary percutaneous
coronary intervention (PCI) is the preferred reperfusion regimen, if performed by
experienced operators in a timely manner. Nevertheless, myocardial damage is not immediately
terminated after successful epicardial reperfusion by primary PCI. Current strategies are
directed to improve myocardial tissue perfusion, which is impaired in approximately 50% of
patients and which has prognostic impact. Adjunctive intravenous abciximab administration is
an established therapy to improve coronary microcirculation and reduce major cardiac adverse
events.5-10 In randomized clinical trials intravenous abciximab administration has been
studied. Clinical trials have shown that earlier administration results in higher
preinterventional TIMI-flow with subsequent improved perfusion post PCI. However, in a
pooled analysis there was no effect on mortality. As door-to-balloon-times getting shorter
in current trials, earlier abciximab administration requires treatment in the prehospital
setting, which poses substantial logistic obstacles. Another option might be intracoronary
abciximab bolus administration which results in very high local platelet inhibitor
concentrations. This might be favorable in dissolution of thrombi and microemboli with
subsequent improved myocardial microcirculation, reduction of no-reflow, and infarct size.
Currently, there is only limited clinical experience on the efficacy of intracoronary
abciximab administration mainly restricted to case reports, retrospective registries or
small randomized trials. In a recently published randomized clinical trial, we were able to
show that intracoronary versus intravenous abciximab bolus administration has beneficial
effects on the occurrence of no-reflow and infarct size assessed by contrast-enhancement
magnetic resonance imaging. This led to a trend towards improved clinical outcome. The
composite major adverse cardiac event rate, defined as death, reinfarction, target vessel
revascularization, and new congestive heart failure, at 30 day follow-up was 15.6% after
intravenous and 5.2% after intracoronary abciximab administration (relative risk 3.00; 95%
confidence intervals 0.94-10.80; p=0.06).
Currently, there is no adequately powered clinical trial to assess the effects of
intracoronary bolus in comparison to standard intravenous abciximab administration. Due to
its general availability and its ease of intracoronary administration this treatment has
overwhelming potential in clinical practice, which is much easier to achieve than a
logistically cumbersome prehospital or interhospital transfer administration.
In the era of evidence-based medicine, such a trial is of paramount importance to achieve a
break-through in abciximab use and a reduction of the high associated morbidity and
mortality of STEMI patients.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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