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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03037632
Other study ID # 2015H0309
Secondary ID R01HL128857
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date June 7, 2016
Est. completion date April 30, 2024

Study information

Verified date March 2024
Source Ohio State University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The aims of the DCM Precision Medicine Study are to test the hypothesis that DCM has substantial genetic basis and to evaluate the effectiveness of a family communication intervention in improving the uptake and impact of family member clinical screening.


Description:

Dilated cardiomyopathy of unknown cause (DCM), known clinically as idiopathic dilated cardiomypathy, is the most common cardiomyopathy and is the leading cause of heart transplantation. DCM affects approximately one million individuals, and so has a major impact on US public health. DCM is commonly asymptomatic until very late in its course when it causes heart failure, disability, and death. Because of its clinical course, any means to identify patients at risk for DCM or to detect DCM in its asymptomatic phase could provide enormous opportunity for intervention to extend lives and prevent late-stage disease. Within this paradigm precision medicine for DCM could greatly impact health care outcomes and costs. Recent advances in DCM genetics have introduced these possibilities, but unresolved questions of familial recurrence risk, genetic etiology, racial differences, and family-based screening must be addressed to move ahead. The central hypothesis of this study, based on published studies of the investigative group, states that DCM has substantial genetic basis. For this study the investigators hypothesize that: (a) 35% of probands of both European and African ancestry (EA/AA) will be classified as familial in a cohort recruited in a multicenter US consortium and given explicit recommendations and assistance to achieve the clinical screening of relatives; (b) approximately 40% of DCM probands, whether categorized as familial or non-familial, or as EA or AA, will have pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in genes previously implicated in DCM; and (c) a tailored intervention to help DCM probands communicate DCM risk to their family members will improve the uptake and impact of necessary clinical and genetic testing. To test these hypotheses, the investigators propose to: (1) estimate and compare the frequencies of EA and AA DCM probands classified as having familial DCM; (2) estimate and compare the proportions of probands with an identifiable genetic cause of DCM in groups defined by proband classification (familial/non-familial) and ancestry (EA/AA); and (3) evaluate the impact of a randomized intervention to aid and direct family communication on participation of at-risk family members in clinical screening and appropriate follow-up surveillance for DCM. These aims will be accomplished by recruiting a cohort of 1300 DCM probands (600 EA, 600 AA, 100 Hispanic ethnicity), performing cardiovascular clinical screening of 2600 family members, performing genetic testing of probands and affected family members by exome sequencing, returning genetic results, and randomizing probands to an intervention to improve family communication regarding DCM risk. Proving these hypotheses would be transformative for the field: rather than viewing DCM as only a clinical diagnosis, cardiovascular professionals would understand DCM as a genetic disease that should be managed using genetic diagnostic and family-based preventive strategies. These study results would make precision medicine for DCM a reality.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 6500
Est. completion date April 30, 2024
Est. primary completion date April 30, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group N/A and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Meeting criteria for dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) : - Left ventricular ejection fraction <50% - Left ventricular enlargement (A left ventricular end-diastolic dimension > 95%tile population standard based on gender and height). - Detectable causes of cardiomyopathy, except genetic, excluded beyond a reasonable doubt at the time of DCM diagnosis (that is, meeting clinical criteria for idiopathic DCM) - Any age (including children) - Non-Hispanic and Hispanic ethnicity - All races (PI pre-approval required for recruitment beyond pre-specified recruitment targets). - Ability to give informed consent - Ability to communicate in English (except Spanish language at sites approved to recruit individuals of Hispanic ethnicity) - Willingness to participate in a family-based study (patient willing to work with a clinical site and/or OSU to facilitate the recruitment and enrollment of family members to the study). Exclusion Criteria: - Coronary artery disease (CAD) causing ischemic cardiomyopathy (> 50% narrowing, any major epicardial coronary artery) - Primary valvular disease - Adriamycin or other cardiotoxic drug exposure - Other forms of cardiomyopathy: Hypertrophic, Restrictive, or Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy - Congenital heart disease - Other detectable causes of dilated cardiomyopathy, including sarcoid and hemochromatosis. - Other active multi-system disease that may cause DCM (e.g., active connective tissue disease). - Severe and untreated or untreatable hypertension (systolic blood pressures routinely greater than 180 mm Hg and/or diastolic blood pressures greater than 120 mm Hg, and if resistant to multidrug treatment). - However, conventional risk factors for DCM, including obesity, routinely treated hypertension, alcohol use, pregnancy or the peri-partum period, or left ventricular noncompaction, will NOT be considered exclusion criteria.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Family Heart Talk Booklet


Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan
United States Emory University Atlanta Georgia
United States University of Maryland Baltimore Maryland
United States Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Beverly Hills California
United States University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama
United States Tufts Medical Center Boston Massachusetts
United States Medical University of South Carolina Charleston South Carolina
United States Northwestern University Chicago Illinois
United States Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio
United States Ohio State University Columbus Ohio
United States University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas
United States Inova Heart and Vascular Institute Fairfax Virginia
United States Houston Methodist Hospital Houston Texas
United States University of Mississippi Medical Center Jackson Mississippi
United States UCLA Medical Center Los Angeles California
United States South Miami Heart Center Miami Florida
United States Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans New Orleans Louisiana
United States NYU School of Medicine New York New York
United States University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska
United States Stanford University Palo Alto California
United States University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania
United States Washington University in St. Louis Saint Louis Missouri
United States University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah
United States University of Washington Seattle Washington
United States University of Arizona Sarver Heart Center Tucson Arizona
United States Medstar Washington Hospital Center (DC) Washington District of Columbia

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Ray Hershberger National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (12)

Burke W, Hovick SR, Jordan E, Ni H, Kinnamon DD, Hershberger RE. Communal Coping as a Strategy to Enhance Family Engagement in Dilated Cardiomyopathy. Circ Genom Precis Med. 2022 Jun;15(3):e003541. doi: 10.1161/CIRCGEN.121.003541. Epub 2022 May 10. — View Citation

Haas GJ, Zareba KM, Ni H, Bello-Pardo E, Huggins GS, Hershberger RE; Study Principal Investigator (PI) and Co-Investigators: The Ohio State University. Validating an Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy Diagnosis Using Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance: The Dilated Cardiomyopathy Precision Medicine Study. Circ Heart Fail. 2022 May;15(5):e008877. doi: 10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.121.008877. Epub 2022 Mar 4. — View Citation

Hershberger RE, Cowan J, Jordan E, Kinnamon DD. The Complex and Diverse Genetic Architecture of Dilated Cardiomyopathy. Circ Res. 2021 May 14;128(10):1514-1532. doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.121.318157. Epub 2021 May 13. — View Citation

Hershberger RE. The Evolving Science of Dilated Cardiomyopathy. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2021 Oct 26;78(17):1700-1702. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2021.08.038. No abstract available. — View Citation

Huggins GS, Kinnamon DD, Haas GJ, Jordan E, Hofmeyer M, Kransdorf E, Ewald GA, Morris AA, Owens A, Lowes B, Stoller D, Tang WHW, Garg S, Trachtenberg BH, Shah P, Pamboukian SV, Sweitzer NK, Wheeler MT, Wilcox JE, Katz S, Pan S, Jimenez J, Aaronson KD, Fishbein DP, Smart F, Wang J, Gottlieb SS, Judge DP, Moore CK, Mead JO, Ni H, Burke W, Hershberger RE; DCM Precision Medicine Study of the DCM Consortium. Prevalence and Cumulative Risk of Familial Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy. JAMA. 2022 Feb 1;327(5):454-463. doi: 10.1001/jama.2021.24674. — View Citation

Jordan E, Kinnamon DD, Haas GJ, Hofmeyer M, Kransdorf E, Ewald GA, Morris AA, Owens A, Lowes B, Stoller D, Tang WHW, Garg S, Trachtenberg BH, Shah P, Pamboukian SV, Sweitzer NK, Wheeler MT, Wilcox JE, Katz S, Pan S, Jimenez J, Fishbein DP, Smart F, Wang J, Gottlieb SS, Judge DP, Moore CK, Mead JO, Hurst N, Cao J, Huggins GS, Cowan J, Ni H, Rehm HL, Jarvik GP, Vatta M, Burke W, Hershberger RE; DCM Precision Medicine Study of the DCM Consortium. Genetic Architecture of Dilated Cardiomyopathy in Individuals of African and European Ancestry. JAMA. 2023 Aug 1;330(5):432-441. doi: 10.1001/jama.2023.11970. — View Citation

Kinnamon DD, Jordan E, Haas GJ, Hofmeyer M, Kransdorf E, Ewald GA, Morris AA, Owens A, Lowes B, Stoller D, Tang WHW, Garg S, Trachtenberg BH, Shah P, Pamboukian SV, Sweitzer NK, Wheeler MT, Wilcox JE, Katz S, Pan S, Jimenez J, Aaronson KD, Fishbein DP, Smart F, Wang J, Gottlieb SS, Judge DP, Moore CK, Mead JO, Huggins GS, Ni H, Burke W, Hershberger RE; DCM Precision Medicine Study of the DCM Consortium. Effectiveness of the Family Heart Talk Communication Tool in Improving Family Member Screening for Dilated Cardiomyopathy: Results of a Randomized Trial. Circulation. 2023 Apr 25;147(17):1281-1290. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.122.062507. Epub 2023 Mar 20. — View Citation

Kinnamon DD, Morales A, Bowen DJ, Burke W, Hershberger RE; DCM Consortium*. Toward Genetics-Driven Early Intervention in Dilated Cardiomyopathy: Design and Implementation of the DCM Precision Medicine Study. Circ Cardiovasc Genet. 2017 Dec;10(6):e001826. doi: 10.1161/CIRCGENETICS.117.001826. — View Citation

Morales A, Kinnamon DD, Jordan E, Platt J, Vatta M, Dorschner MO, Starkey CA, Mead JO, Ai T, Burke W, Gastier-Foster J, Jarvik GP, Rehm HL, Nickerson DA, Hershberger RE; DCM Precision Medicine study of the DCM Consortium; DCM Consortium institutions and personnel participating in this study: Study Principal Investigator and Co-Investigators,DCM Consortium Clinical Site Principal Investigators and Clinical Site Other Significant Contributors (OSC). The following clinical sites and individuals contributed to the submission of RO 1 H L 128857 as Site Principal Investigators (Site Pl) or as Other Significant Contributors (OSC),Dr. Huggins also served as study co-principal investigator,The following clinical site was added following approval of NHGRI supplemental funding but prior to initiation of enrollment,The following clinical sites were added following study activation. Variant Interpretation for Dilated Cardiomyopathy: Refinement of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/ClinGen Guidelines for the DCM Precision Medicine Study. Circ Genom Precis Med. 2020 Apr;13(2):e002480. doi: 10.1161/CIRCGEN.119.002480. Epub 2020 Mar 11. — View Citation

Ni H, Jordan E, Cao J, Kinnamon DD, Gottlieb SS, Hofmeyer M, Jimenez J, Judge DP, Kransdorf E, Morris AA, Owens A, Shah P, Tang WHW, Wang J, Hershberger RE. Knowledge of Genome Sequencing and Trust in Medical Researchers Among Patients of Different Racial and Ethnic Groups With Idiopathic Dilated Cardiomyopathy. JAMA Cardiol. 2023 Jan 1;8(1):33-42. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2022.4132. — View Citation

Ni H, Jordan E, Kinnamon DD, Cao J, Haas GJ, Hofmeyer M, Kransdorf E, Ewald GA, Morris AA, Owens A, Lowes B, Stoller D, Tang WHW, Garg S, Trachtenberg BH, Shah P, Pamboukian SV, Sweitzer NK, Wheeler MT, Wilcox JE, Katz S, Pan S, Jimenez J, Fishbein DP, Smart F, Wang J, Gottlieb SS, Judge DP, Moore CK, Huggins GS, Hershberger RE; DCM Precision Medicine Study of the DCM Consortium. Screening for Dilated Cardiomyopathy in At-Risk First-Degree Relatives. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2023 May 30;81(21):2059-2071. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2023.03.419. — View Citation

Trachtenberg BH, Jimenez J, Morris AA, Kransdorf E, Owens A, Fishbein DP, Jordan E, Kinnamon DD, Mead JO, Huggins GS, Hershberger RE; DCM Precision Medicine Study of the DCM Consortium. TTR variants in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy: An investigation of the DCM Precision Medicine Study. Genet Med. 2022 Jul;24(7):1495-1502. doi: 10.1016/j.gim.2022.03.011. Epub 2022 Apr 18. — View Citation

* Note: There are 12 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Family clinical screening completed within 12 months from proband enrollment. The probability that a living first-degree relative (FDR) without a previous definitive DCM diagnosis completes clinical screening for DCM within 12 months after proband recruitment 12 months from proband enrollment.
Primary Living first-degree relative adheres to cardiovascular surveillance recommendations after return of genetic results. The probability that a living first-degree relative adheres to surveillance recommendations within 15 months after the proband receives individual genetic test information. 2.5 years
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