Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03994900 |
Other study ID # |
PICA V2.2 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
September 1, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2022 |
Source |
Université Catholique de Louvain |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Cardiovascular diseases are the first mortality cause in Occidental countries. Surgery and
anesthesia can provoke hemodynamic instability and stimulation of the sympathetic nervous
system as well as bleeding or thrombosis. These factors as top of some post-operative factors
such as tissular hypoxemia, can result in cardiovascular complications. Developing a tool to
predict post-operative cardiovascular complication could influence peri-operative measures by
stratifying the population at risk. UCLouvain has developed a patented technique using a
paramagnetic electronic resonance spectrometry (EPR) able to quantify a paramagnetic
component, nitrosylated hemoglobin (HbNO) of the erythrocytes drawn from venous blood. This
HbNO has been correlated to the traditional cardiac risk factors. In this study, we will
assess the HbNO of patients prior to surgery and will correlate it with cardiovascualr and
non cardiovascular complications in order to evaluate the predictive aspect of our biomarker.
Description:
Cardiovascular diseases are the first mortality cause in Occidental countries. They would be
the cause of 31% of the overall mortality in those countries.
Some risk factors are strongly related to the apparition of a cardiovascular disease,
including smoking, high cholesterol levels, hypertension, diabetes, age, high BMI or familial
early cardiovascular disease and/or hypercholesterolemia.
Multiple studies have already shown that major non-cardiac surgery can lead to cardiovascular
complications in 3% of the patients regardless of their cardiovascular risk profile and major
adverse cardiovascular events are a significant source of post-operative morbidity in
approximately 11% among those patient3,4,6,7. Complications can also lead to a prolongated
hospitalization for patients undergoing major non-cardiac surgery8,9.The peri- and
post-operative cardiovascular complications depend on patient-related risk factors.
Surgery and anesthesia can provoke hemodynamic instability and stimulation of the sympathetic
nervous system. Surgery and the ensuing inflammation can also induce bleeding and or
thrombosis. These factors as top of some post-operative factors such as tissular hypoxemia,
can result in cardiovascular complications.
An assessment of the medical cardiac history of the patients is performed before any
surgery3. Developing a tool to predict post-operative cardiovascular complication could
influence peri-operative measures by stratifying the population at risk.
It is known that cardiovascular diseases are preceded by a dysfunction of the vascular
endothelium leading to a loss of the antithrombogenic, anti-proliferative and vasorelaxant
functions.
A key mediator of vascular homeostasis and endothelial integrity is the nitric oxide (NO)
produced by the endothelial NO synthetase (eNOS). UCLouvain has developed a patented
technique using a paramagnetic electronic resonance spectrometry (EPR) able to quantify a
paramagnetic component, nitrosylated hemoglobin (HbNO) of the erythrocytes drawn from venous
blood. This HbNO has been correlated to the traditional cardiac risk factors.
Quantifying the HbNO could predict, prior to any major non-cardiac surgery, an eventual
peri-operative cardiovascular complication. Preoperative HbNO would as such be a useful
marker of cardiovascular complications. Necessary perioperative measures can therefore be
taken in order to decrease this risk. This assessment would be associated to the preoperative
anesthesia visit (EPI : évaluation péri-interventionnelle) form reporting previous
cardiovascular events and risk factors.