Peripheral Artery Disease Clinical Trial
— COCOA-PADOfficial title:
Cocoa to Improve Walking Performance in Peripheral Artery Disease
Verified date | July 2020 |
Source | Northwestern University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The COCOA-PAD trial will determine whether epicatechin-rich cocoa daily for six months improves walking performance in individuals with peripheral artery disease compared to placebo.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 44 |
Est. completion date | October 15, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | October 15, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 60 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. All participants will be age 60 and older. 2. All participants will have PAD. PAD will be defined as follows. First, an ABI < 0.90 at baseline is an inclusion criterion for PAD. Second, potential participants with an ABI > 0.90 who have vascular lab evidence of PAD or angiographic evidence of PAD will be eligible. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Above- or below-knee amputation. 2. Critical limb ischemia. 3. Wheelchair-bound or requiring a cane or walker to ambulate. 4. Walking is limited by a symptom other than PAD. 5. Baseline six-minute walk value of <500 feet or >1,600 feet 6. Lower extremity revascularization, major orthopedic surgery, cardiovascular event, or coronary revascularization in the previous three months. 7. Planned revascularization or major surgery during the next six months. 8. Major medical illness including renal disease requiring dialysis, lung disease requiring oxygen, Parkinson's disease, a life-threatening illness with life expectancy less than six months, or cancer requiring treatment in the previous two years. [NOTE: potential participants may still qualify if they have had treatment for an early stage cancer in the past two years and the prognosis is excellent. Participants who require oxygen only at night may still qualify.] 9. Mini-Mental Status Examination (MMSE) score < 23 or dementia. 10. Unwilling to attend three visits in one week for final outcome measures. 11. Allergy to chocolate. 12. Unwilling or unable to consume products manufactured on the same equipment that processes peanuts, tree nuts, egg, wheat, soy, and milk. 13. Use of cocoa-containing dietary supplements. 14. Unwilling to give up major dietary sources of epicatechin during the study. 15. Symptoms of heart failure or angina that limit walking activity more than ischemic leg symptoms, increase in angina, or angia at rest (i.e. unstable angina). 16. Participation in or completion of a clinical trial in the previous three months. [NOTE: after completing a stem cell or gene therapy intervention, participants will become eligible after the final study follow-up visit of the stem cell or gene therapy study so long as at least six months have passed since the final intervention administration. After completing a supplement or drug therapy (other than stem cell or gene therapy), participants will be eligible after the final study follow-up visit as long as at least three months have passed since the final intervention of the trial.] 17. Non-English speaking, a visual impairment that limits walking ability. 18. In addition to the above criteria, investigator discretion will be used to determine if the trial is unsafe or not a good fit for the potential participant. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine | Chicago | Illinois |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Northwestern University | National Institute on Aging (NIA) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change From Baseline in Six-minute Walk Distance | Following a standardized protocol, participants walked up and down a 100-ft hallway for 6 minutes after instruction to cover as much distance as possible. | Change from baseline to six-month follow-up. Note - There will be two measures: One 2-3 hours after the final study beverage dose and one 24 hours after the final dose. | |
Secondary | Change From Baseline in Maximal and Pain-free Treadmill Walking Time | Maximal treadmill walking time and time to ischemic leg symptom onset were measured using the Gardner-Skinner protocol at baseline and 6-month follow-up. | Change from baseline to six-month follow-up | |
Secondary | Change in Baseline From Brachial Artery Flow-mediated Dilation: Change in Brachial Artery Diameter | Brachial artery flow-mediated dilation was measured in the proximal brachial artery (B mode and Doppler) after a 12-hour fast by Registered Diagnostic Cardiac Sonographers using a linear array vascular ultrasound transducer (Sequoia Model #256; frequency, 8 MHz; range, 5-8 MHz; Siemens Medical Solutions). A cuff proximal to the visualized brachial artery segment was inflated for 4 minutes at 50 mmHg above systolic pressure. Brachial artery images were obtained 60 seconds after cuff deflation and interpreted by a single reader, blinded to group assignment, at the University of Wisconsin Atherosclerosis Imaging Research Program Core Laboratory. Change in brachial artery diameter will be reported in percent change. | Change from baseline to six-month follow-up. Note - there will be two measures: One 2-3 hours after the final study beverage dose and one 24 hours after the final study beverage dose. | |
Secondary | Change From Baseline Accelerometer-measured Physical Activity | Free-living physical activity was acquired over 7 days with the ActiGraph accelerometer. The accelerometer was worn on the right hip and removed only for bathing or sleeping. | Change from baseline to six-month follow-up | |
Secondary | Change in Baseline Calf Skeletal Muscle Measures: Abundance of PGC1a, Myostatin and Follistatin | An open-muscle biopsy at baseline was performed in the medial head of the gastrocnemius muscle. Anesthesia was achieved with subcutaneous lidocaine. Subcutaneous tissue was dissected, and ˜250 mg of muscle was removed and immediately prepared for freezing at -80°C. At 6-month follow-up, the biopsy was repeated, adjacent to the original biopsy, identifiable by the scar. | Change from baseline to six-month follow-up | |
Secondary | Change in Baseline MRI-Measured Calf Skeletal Muscle Perfusion | Arterial spin labeling with cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure changes in calf perfusion at 3 T between PAD participants receiving cocoa versus placebo. A thigh cuff was inflated to 250 mm Hg in the leg with the lowest ABI and rapidly deflated after 5 minutes. Seven control-tagged image pairs were acquired over 60 seconds using pulsed arterial spin labeling pulse sequence with single-shot echo-planar imaging readouts ( eld of view, 200×200 mm; matrix, 64×64; repetition time, 4000 ms; echo time, 32 ms; slice thickness, 10 mm). Perfusion was measured and quantified on a Siemens Healthcare workstation by coinvestigator C.M.K. | Change from baseline to six-month follow-up | |
Secondary | Change in Baseline Calf Skeletal Muscle Measures: Citrate Synthase and COX Activity | An open-muscle biopsy at baseline was performed in the medial head of the gastrocnemius muscle. Anesthesia was achieved with subcutaneous lidocaine. Subcutaneous tissue was dissected, and ˜250 mg of muscle was removed and immediately prepared for freezing at -80°C. At 6-month follow-up, the biopsy was repeated, adjacent to the original biopsy, identifiable by the scar. | Change from baseline to six-month follow-up |
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