ST-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison Of The Fast Pharmaco-invasive Strategy With The Standard Pharmaco-invasive Strategy In Patients With ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction Stratified By The Forearm Approach: Randomized Clinical Trial
INTRODUCTION: The pharmaco-invasive strategy is a safe alternative to primary percutaneous
coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with ST elevation acute myocardial infarction, who
cannot be in the cathlab in less than 120 minutes. However, previous studies of this strategy
used the femoral artery as the main vascular access. Current studies show that the use of the
radial artery in cases of acute myocardial infarction minimizes the risk of bleeding and
mortality. Therefore, in the scenario where vascular access through the forearm vessels is
recommended, the best timing to perform cardiac catheterization in the pharmaco-invasive
strategy is not known.
OBJECTIVE: To compare the 24-hour hemoglobin drop (acute anemia) between the fast
pharmaco-invasive strategy (within 3 hours) and the standard pharmaco-invasive strategy (3 to
24 hours) in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) by coronary occlusion treated in
Sancta Maggiore hospitals in São Paulo and underwent to cardiac catheterization through the
forearm vessels.
METHOD: A prospective, randomized, multicenter study will be conducted in which 120 subjects
will be randomly divided for fast and standard cardiac catheterization (1: 1). Stent
implantation in the culprit vessel will be performed. The primary objective is to assess
whether the fast cardiac catheterization is non-inferior to the standard strategy for a
hemoglobin (Hb) drop within 24 hours. Considering in the control group an average drop of Hb
0.6 ± 1g / dl and that a drop greater than 3 g/dL of Hb is related to unfavorable clinical
outcome, using a two-tailed alpha of 0.05 and a power of 90% to test the non-inferiority of
the fast strategy with respect to standard strategy, each group will require 60 patients,
totaling 120 individuals to include. However, if Hb fall in the fast strategy is greater than
3 g/dL and this result does not reproduce in the standard strategy, the study will allow us
to show the superiority of the standard approach (between 3 and 24 hours).
The FARAD MI will be a randomized, multicenter prospective study will be conducted. Patients
with the diagnosis of ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction treated at the Sancta
Maggiore Emergency Departments who have been thrombolyzed and aged up to 80 years will be
included. After thrombolysis, patients will be immediately transferred to the Sancta Maggiore
Hospital Itaim Unit and should arrive less than 3 hours after thrombolytic completion. When
they arrive at the Interventional Cardiology Department, they will be explained about the
study and offered to participate in the trial with consequent signature of the informed
consent form. Thereafter, electrocardiogram and blood collection will be performed for
laboratory tests, including hemoglobin, and patients will be randomized (1:1) to fast
pharmaco-invasive strategy (within 3 hours of thrombolytic completion) and standard
pharmaco-invasive strategy (3-24 hours). They will stay in the Interventional Cardiology
Department until the procedure is performed and then the in-hospital care will be continued.
Twenty-four hours after admission to the Interventional Cardiology Department, a new
hemoglobin collection will be performed. Patients who refuse to participate in the trial will
not have any harm in the treatment of acute coronary syndrome. Patients will receive standard
clinical therapy, including dual antiplatelet therapy. Stent implantation will be performed
in the culprit vessel by AMI. The treatment of residual coronary artery disease (coronary
lesions with obstruction greater than 70% or with evidence of ischemia) will be discussed
with the Clinical Cardiology team during hospitalization.
The following data will be collected: gender, age, ST-segment elevation location on the
electrocardiogram (ECG), symptoms duration, time from first evaluation to ECG (door-to-ECG),
time from first evaluation until thrombolytic administration (door-to-needle), thrombolytic
used, medications administered at the origin unit, time between the end of thrombolytic and
the beginning of cardiac catheterization, type of procedure (diagnosis and / or
intervention), date and time of procedure, access site, radiation dose, contrast volume,
associated comorbidities, laboratory, weight, height, BMI, coronary artery disease pattern
(Syntax Score), vessel culprit for AMI, type and size of stent used, successful intervention,
coronary flow at the end of the procedure (TIMI), angioplasty technique, residual coronary
artery disease approach, bleeding (BARC), major cardiovascular adverse events (MACE), any
cause and cardiovascular death. The hemoglobin of the patient's admission to the
Interventional Cardiology Department and its variation after 24 hours will be evaluated. If
red blood cell transfusion is required, pre-transfusion hemoglobin will be considered for
evaluation.
Data from each patient will be registered in the REDCap platform in a electronic case report
form (CRF) and will be submitted to statistical analysis using the Statistical Package for
the Social Sciences (SPSS) 24 program. The REDCap has some important characteristics such as
role-based authentication and security; real-time data validation and integrity checking;
data assignment and audit capability; storage and sharing of protocols; central storage and
backup of data and data export in formats compatible with known analysis programs as Excel,
SPSS, Statistical Analysis System (SAS), Stata, R software, among others. Data will be
audited by an independent team from Prevent Senior's Institute of Education and Research.
Patients who have the following characteristics will not be included in this trial:
contraindications to fibrinolytic therapy, such as active internal bleeding, clinical signs
of acute aortic dissection, traumatic or prolonged cardiopulmonary resuscitation (> 10
minutes), head trauma in the last four weeks, history of intracranial neoplasia, ischemic
stroke in the past year or previous haemorrhagic stroke, pregnancy, sustained severe
hypertension (≥180 mmHg systolic pressure and / or ≥110 mmHg diastolic pressure), trauma or
major surgery in the last four weeks, use of oral anticoagulants, history of liver or kidney
failure; did not meet reperfusion criteria upon arrival at the Interventional Cardiology
Service of the Sancta Maggiore Hospital Itaim Unit (no improvement in chest pain or reduction
in ST-segment elevation below 50% after thrombolytic administration); having femoral access
as the first choice for invasive stratification; bleeding complications prior to cardiac
catheterization, such as important hematoma and stroke; acute pulmonary edema (dyspnea of
cardiac etiology with increased respiratory effort, hypoxemia and / or desaturation);
cardiogenic shock (systolic blood pressure below 90 mmHg associated with signs of tissue
hypoperfusion, such as oliguria, altered level of consciousness, cyanosis, cold and wet
extremities, or vasopressor drug use); do not accept to sign the consent form.
Patients will be studied according to the precepts of the Helsinki Declaration and the
Nuremberg Code, respecting the Research Norms Involving Human Beings (National Health Council
resolution: 466/12) of the National Health Council. The study will be explained to patients
when they are admitted to the Interventional Cardiology Department of the Sancta Maggiore
Itaim Hospital and will be required to sign the Informed Consent Form (ICF) before any
invasive procedure is performed. Randomization will be performed through a specific site
after signing the consent form. The project was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of
the Prevent Senior Research Institute.
To perform the sample calculation, the study of Bertrand OF et al (2010) was used to evaluate
the variation of hemoglobin (Hb) in 24 hours after coronary angioplasty by radial approach.
The control group had a mean hemoglobin drop of 0.6 ± 1g / dL and there were worse outcomes
in patients with a hemoglobin drop greater than 3g / dL. (22) Therefore, considering in the
control group a mean Hb fall of 0.6 ± 1g / dl and a fall greater than 3 g/dL of Hb is related
to an unfavorable clinical outcome, using a two-tailed alpha of 0.05 and a power of 90% to
test the non-inferiority of the fast strategy over the standard strategy, each group will
require 60 patients, totaling 120 individuals to be included. However, if the Hb drop in the
fast strategy is greater than 3 g/dL and this result does not reproduce in the standard
strategy, the study will allow us to show the superiority of the strategy between 3 and 24
hours.
An intention-to-treat assessment will be performed. Categorical variables will be presented
as absolute numbers and percentages. Continuous variables will be presented as mean ±
standard deviation or median (interquartile range) according to their distribution. The
distribution evaluation of continuous variables will be tested with Shapiro-Wilk. For
continuous variables, the Student's t-test (normal distribution) or Wilcoxon-rank (non-normal
distribution) will be used according to their distribution. For categorical variables the
Chi-square test will be used.
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