Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Endothelial Modulation With L-Arginine in Patients Undergoing Angiogenic Therapy (EMAT): A 2x2 Factorial Trial
Coronary artery disease is the single most important killer of Canadians. Despite major
advances in therapy, there is still a significant proportion of patients identified with the
disease who die of it because current treatment approaches cannot effectively palliate their
condition. A new treatment modality called therapeutic angiogenesis has appeared on the
clinical research scene during the last five years; this approach recreates the natural
processes of new blood vessel formation that is observed during growth and development in
every human being. It is an extremely potent and promising modality, but so far the results
of clinical trials in patients have been equivocal.
One reason for the limited efficacy observed thus far with therapeutic angiogenesis may rest
in that factors produced by the lining of the coronary arteries themselves are essential for
angiogenic substances to take effect in the heart muscle of patients with severe coronary
artery disease. These same patients, however, virtually all have, as a result of their
disease, marked dysfunction of their coronaries and therefore fail to produce these factors
in adequate quantities. This hypothesis has been verified with extensive animal data by the
investigators of this research, where a swine model of coronary disease was shown to
severely inhibit the action of angiogenic growth factors. If one wants angiogenesis to work,
a means of improving the function of the coronary lining of patients with severe ischemic
heart disease must be identified and its effects evaluated in order to allow for angiogenic
substances to exert their action towards successful revascularization of the heart muscle.
An amino acid called L-arginine has repeatedly been shown to markedly improve function of
the coronary artery lining in patients with ischemic heart disease when administered
regularly over a period of several months. This research will therefore test, in the form of
a randomized clinical trial, whether this concomitant approach can make angiogenesis
effective in patients with advanced coronary disease, by allowing for the action of growth
factors to take place in the heart. If this approach is successful, as is anticipated,
angiogenesis will constitute an effective modality for the treatment of coronary artery
disease, not only in patients with advanced, severe involvement unamenable to any other form
of cardiac therapy such as coronary artery bypass grafting, but even perhaps in all patients
with coronary artery disease in need of revascularization. The goal of this investigation
towards the making of a new, revolutionary, safe and efficacious modality for the treatment
of the number one killer disease of Canadians is in complete agreement with the primary
objective of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada.
The EMAT trial tests the hypothesis that the concomitant treatment of chronic endothelial
dysfunction in patients undergoing angiogenic therapy can make angiogenesis clinically
effective. This is achieved with a 2x2 factorial, double-blind, placebo-controlled
randomized trial of intramyocardial vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) angiogenesis
at a dose of 2 mg and of adjunct endothelial modulation therapy using oral L-arginine
supplementation at a dose of 6 g/day in patients undergoing surgical perivascular angiogenic
therapy. The study involves surgical angiogenesis techniques similar to those previously
used and reported to be clinically safe by the principal investigator and collaborators.
Patients with a diffusely disease left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery have this
artery grafted with an internal thoracic artery in either its proximal or distal portion
(according to what is felt by the surgeon to be most optimal as per usual practice). The
segment of the LAD that is not directly bypassed (i.e. either the proximal portion if a
distal bypass is performed by the surgeon or the distal portion if a proximal bypass is
performed) is treated by the surgeon with VEGF angiogenesis or placebo injections. Other
coronary arteries in need of bypass grafting are grafted as per usual practice, using
arterial grafts. Patients are therefore randomized to one of four groups at the time of
coronary artery bypass grafting:
- growth factor (VEGF) angiogenesis along the diffusely diseased, non-directly bypassed
LAD segment + L-arginine oral supplementation;
- placebo "angiogenesis" along the diffusely diseased, non-directly bypassed LAD segment
+ L-arginine oral supplementation;
- growth factor (VEGF) angiogenesis along the diffusely diseased, non-directly bypassed
LAD segment + placebo oral supplementation; and
- placebo "angiogenesis" along the diffusely diseased, non-directly bypassed LAD segment
+ placebo oral supplementation.
The angiogenesis treatment consists either of the injection of 2 mg (divided in 10
injections of 200 μg each) of plasmid DNA encoding for the VEGF165 gene or of 10 x 1 ml
injections of a sterile physiologic saline solution in the myocardial territory and septum
along the diffusely diseased, non-directly bypassed LAD segment. Other myocardial
territories are concomitantly revascularized with arterial coronary bypass grafts.
The EMAT trial's primary end-points relate to objective myocardial perfusion indices and
contractility of the intervened anterior myocardial portion, respectively measured with
cardiac positron-emission tomography (PET) by using the investigational radioisotope 13-N
ammonia, and by RNA or echocardiography. Using 13-N PET, collateral-dependent blood flow and
ischemic zone size are measured in a double-blind fashion by a single observer at baseline
and at 3 months. To better delineate the actual effects of angiogenic therapy, baseline
perfusion scans are obtained 3 to 5 days after the operative procedure in order to account
for the potentially confounding effect of CABG on myocardial perfusion to the proximal and
distal anterior and septal territories. The functional, secondary end-points of the EMAT
trial consist of clinical outcomes including major adverse cardiac events (MACE), freedom
from angina, and angina class.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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