Aortic Stenosis, Severe Clinical Trial
— CAUSATIVEOfficial title:
Analysis of Calcium Score Values of Severe Aortic Stenosis in Patients With and Without Cardiac Amyloidosis (CAUSATIVE Study)
The concomitant presence of cardiac amyloidosis (CA) in patients with aortic stenosis (AS) may challenge the estimation of stenosis degree. In patients with dual pathology (AS + CA) the most frequent AS hemodynamic profile is paradoxical low-flow, low-gradient AS. In this setting, estimating stenosis degree with cardiac ultrasound may be challenging and aortic valve calcium score estimation by cardiac CT is a valuable exam. Preliminary findings from small case series showed that patients with severe AS and CA presented less valvular calcium deposition compared to patients with severe AS alone. On this basis, confirmation of these findings would have a huge clinical impact on diagnosis, choice of treatment strategy and understanding of the pathophysiology of these patients. The aim of the study is to study the correlation between valvular calcium score (assessed by EKG-gated CT) and effective orifice area (assessed through echocardiogram) according to cardiac amyloidosis presence (in the overall population and among hemodynamic phenotypes of cardiac amyloidosis). As secondary endpoints the study will sought to assess TAVI/SAVR efficacy, procedural complications, in-hospital mortality, all-cause death and heart failure hospitalization at 1 year, according to absence or presence of CA.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 480 |
Est. completion date | June 1, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | May 1, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 65 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - signed informed consent - age =65 years old - severe AS - planned or performed TAVI/SAVR - at least one red-flag suggestive of CA - availability of EKG-gated CT - availability of echocardiogram performed before TAVI/SAVR - availability of bone scintigraphy performed within 1 year from CT Exclusion Criteria: • suboptimal acoustic window that may undermine the assessment of AS severity and phenotype profiling |
Country | Name | City | State |
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Italy | University Hospital of Ferrara | Ferrara |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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University Hospital of Ferrara |
Italy,
Hussain M, Hanna M, Griffin BP, Conic J, Patel J, Fava AM, Watson C, Phelan DM, Jellis C, Grimm RA, Rodriguez LL, Schoenhagen P, Hachamovitch R, Jaber WA, Cremer PC, Collier P. Aortic Valve Calcium in Patients With Transthyretin Cardiac Amyloidosis: A Pro — View Citation
Hussan et al. Aortic Valve Calcium Score Cut-Offs Used To Identify Hemodynamically Severe Aortic Stenosis May Not Apply In Patients With Cardiac Amyloidosis. ACC.20 World Congress of Cardiology (https://www.jacc.org/doi/abs/10.1016/S0735-1097%2820%2932791-1)
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Correlation between valvular calcium score and effective orifice area. | Correlation between valvular calcium score (assessed by EKG-gated CT) and effective orifice area (assessed through echocardiogram) according to cardiac amyloidosis presence (in the overall population and among hemodynamic phenotypes of cardiac amyloidosis). | Up to 12 months | |
Secondary | TAVI/SAVR efficacy | Echocardiographic mean and maximal aortic gradient (mmHg) will be assessed. | At time of post-procedural echocardiographic assessment (through study completion, an average of 1 month) | |
Secondary | TAVI/SAVR efficacy | Echocardiographic effective orifice valvular area (EROA) will be assessed and reported in cm2. | At time of post-procedural echocardiographic assessment (through study completion, an average of 1 month) | |
Secondary | Procedural Complications | Procedural complications will be assessed as per VARC definitions | At an average of 12 months | |
Secondary | In-hospital Mortality | In-hospital Mortality will be assessed from hospital records | At an average of 12 months | |
Secondary | All-cause Mortality and Heart Failure Hospitalization | The composite of all-cause Mortality and Heart Failure Hospitalization will be assessed through clinical follow-up, hospital records, and telephone follow-up. | At an average of 12 months |