Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Background: Changes occurring in the pulmonary vascularity imparts changes to the right heart in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Importantly changes in RV function correlates with severity of disease and patient outcome. This affords and opportunity to assess patients longitudinally through point of care ultrasonography. Investigators objective was to measure the percentage and the rate of patients management change, represented by change in treatment or assessment of patients in the PAH clinic, and to compared management change rate between patients with PAH who underwent point of care ultrasonography (POCUS) assessment in addition to the routine evaluation, and a control group to which the investigators did not add a test with POCUS in addition to the routine evaluation in the clinic. Methods: Consecutive patients from the PAH clinic in two medical centers were randomized to the POCUS assessment group and the non-POCUS group. The POCUS group received lung, heart, and vascular ultrasound assessments. All other assessments were the same between both groups. Management changes were documented during each of the patients' visits over a three-month interval.


Clinical Trial Description

The investigators included patients if they were diagnosed with group 1 PH (PAH), as defined by the updated clinical classification of PH and provided informed consent. Patients were excluded if diagnosed with PH group 2-5, had congenital heart disease, liver cirrhosis, or suspected pulmonary venous-occlusive disease. On enrollment, randomization of the patient was done 1:1 (using ClinStat) to either the POCUS assessment group or control group. Both groups underwent the same clinical assessment according to PH clinic protocol and by the same treating pulmonologist (A.A.). Every patient was scheduled to a follow up meeting every three months as part of the usual PAH clinic routine. The study protocol was approved by each participating center's research ethics board (BRZ 0106-18, SOR0327-16). At each clinic visit evaluations for both groups were standardized. Each visit included a history, physical and laboratory evaluation, BNP level, 6-minute walk test, and quality of life as assessed using emPHasis 10. Prior to the decision regarding patient management, the pulmonologist at the PAH clinic knew the test results including a POCUS test done in the intervention group. A change in the patient's management in the clinic is represented by the clinician's recommendation for a change in medication, sending the patient for a lung transplant, hospitalization, or other diagnostic or therapeutic procedure documented Patients in the intervention group underwent a bedside-focused sonographic assessment of the heart, lungs, abdomen, and IVC in every clinic visit during the period of study. The exam was conducted either at the beginning or after the regular patient assessment. The Investigators used 2-dimensional views, the parasternal long and short axis, subcostal long and IVC, apical 5, 4, 2 chamber view. As this exam was POCUS centered and not a formal cardiac study. When pathologies were identified, relevant measurements were made, and the patient was referred for a formal echo. For example, when a calcified aortic valve was detected, and aortic stenosis was suspected a continuous pulse wave Doppler for maximal velocity measurement was conducted. Standard measurements were for left ventricle wall thickness, size of ventricles and atria, IVC size and collapsibility index, RVSP when TR was identified, TAPSE, and size of pericardial effusion when found. Lung ultrasound was focused on the detection of pulmonary congestion (screening and counting B-lines on both lungs, midclavicular line and midaxillary line), pleural effusion, lung atelectasis, lung consolidations (mid and posterior axillary lines), and sliding of pleura (midclavicular line). The investigators performed Doppler for DVT only within the right clinical context. All POCUS exams were documented in a standardized form. Findings were reported in real-time to the treating pulmonologist and were documented in the follow-up notes. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05332847
Study type Interventional
Source Soroka University Medical Center
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 14, 2018
Completion date June 30, 2021