Chagas Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Selenium Treatment and Chagasic Cardiopathy (STCC): A Prospective Randomized Trial in Patients With Chagas Disease
Background:
Chagasic myocardiopathy caused by the protozoa Trypanosoma cruzi has been the principal
cause of cardiac death in Latin America. Without any trypanocidal therapeutic intervention,
infected subjects can pass from the indeterminate to the cardiac form with heart
dysfunction. Our group has studied the role and the effect of the supplementation with the
essential micronutrient selenium (Se) on T. cruzi infection, and the investigators have
verified that:
1. low Se levels is related to the severity of the myocardiopathy in chagasic patients
2. adequate Se diet is essential for mice survival at the acute phase of the experimental
T. cruzi infection
3. Se supplementation prevented the myocardial lesions at the acute phase in mice. From
these findings and considering that Se supplementation was able to prevent Keshan
cardiopathy, to revert electrocardiographic and echocardiographic alterations in
patients nourished by parenteral route, and reduced re-infarction and cardiac deaths
from acute myocardial infarction; the investigators purpose to investigate if Se
treatment via oral route, is able to impair the progress of heart dysfunction in
chagasic patients expressed by the study of progression rate and by the comparison of
the means of ventricular ejection fraction.
Methods:
The Selenium treatment and Chagasic Cardiopathy (STCC) trial is double-blind, placebo
controlled, randomized in 130 chagasic patients at the chronic phase following the inclusion
criteria of (a) altered ECHO (LVEF between 0,35 % and 45 %), (b) age between 20 and 65
years, (c) randomly divided in two groups: Placebo (n=65) and Se (n=65). Patients of Se
group will intake diary 100 µg Se as sodium selenite for 12 months. The primary endpoint is
the reduction of 50 % in the progression rate of heart dysfunction, and the secondary
endpoint is a partial or total reversion in electrocardiography alterations.
Conclusion:
This trial was recently approved by Brazilian Research Ethics Committee and will be
conducted in accordance with the principles for human experimentation. If the investigators
confirmed the benefit of Se treatment, a strategy of utilization a micronutrient in an
adequate concentration as a treatment in diary diet can revolutionize the therapeutic for
chagasic myocardiopathy.
Several induced cardiomyopathy , Mycoplasma pneumonia-induced myocarditis, heart damage
investigations have shown positive effects of Se on experimental models: cardiotoxicity
induced by chemotherapics, ischemic cardiopathy, CVB3 and LP-BM5 (murine AIDS,
retrovirus)-in reperfused heart, and in chagasic cardiopathy. In addition, beneficial
effects of Se supplementation were reported in patients with myocardial infarct, Keshan
disease, and cardiac dysfunction during HPN.
Our group has investigated the role and Se effect on infection by T. cruzi. By evaluating
plasma Se levels in 170 chagasic patients, we discovered that the frequency of subjects with
Se levels lower than normal was significantly higher in those with severe cardiopathy.
Moreover, in this pioneering research, we found a positive correlation between Se levels and
the LVEF, indicating that normal Se levels pave the way for efficient cardiac function.
Later, we investigated if nutritional deficiency of this trace element interfered with the
development of cardiopathy and the susceptibility to experimental T. cruzi infection. In
that study, we found 100 % of mortality in Se deficient mice, while in the selenium adequate
groups only 20% of the male and no female died even at 40 dpi. In addition, parasitemia
levels of infected mice were not altered by Se deficiency, suggesting that the high
susceptibility at the acute phase was not due to the parasite load. We later investigated if
Se treatment could minimize the course of T. cruzi infection or the myocarditis in mice. We
verified that the concentration of 4 ppm Se did not alter the resistance to infection but
was able in preventing the increase of CK-MB levels in infected mice, indicating that Se
helps to protect the heart from inflammatory damage driven by T. cruzi infection.
Currently, experimental and clinical trials concerning Se supplementation have been
performed; however, to date, there is no trial regarding the use of this micronutrient as a
treatment to protect cardiac function in chagasic patients with cardiopathy. The present
clinical trial aims to study the effect of Se intervention on the progression rate of the
cardiopathy in patients with mild or moderate HD (LVEF between 35 % and 45 %) in order to
validate this new strategy of treatment. The HD will be expressed by the progression rate
and by the comparison of means of the LVEF. In this context we will test the hypothesis that
Se treatment is able to interfere with the progression of cardiac dysfunction in chronic
chagasic patients. We expect the impediment of the progression of ventricular dysfunction in
patients with mild HD, and the improvement of cardiac function in patients with moderate HD
in the group of patients receiving Se therapy. This is the first clinical trial concerning
this specific group of cardiac chagasic patients with mild or moderate HD.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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