Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized Controlled Trial to Evaluate the Cost and Clinical Effectiveness of CT Coronary Angiography in Patients With Stable Angina Pectoris (RADICAL Trial)
Heart disease remains the most common cause of death in the UK. Chest pain is often the
first presenting symptom in patients with heart disease, and may be a warning signal prior
to a heart attack or death. The diagnosis based on symptoms alone however is unreliable and
further testing is almost always necessary.
Rapid access chest pain clinics (RACPCs) are able to expedite the assessment of such
patients. The principal investigation used is an exercise stress electrocardiogram (s-ECG).
Although simple, cheap, and convenient, the s-ECG is often inaccurate; missing the diagnosis
or falsely suggesting the diagnosis. This can happen in as many as 25% of patients,
resulting in a delay in treatment or unnecessary further investigation.
CT Angiography (CTA) is a novel non-invasive technique where the coronary arteries can be
visualised by Computerised Tomography. In previous studies it shows a high degree of
correlation with invasive angiography, with a high accuracy for the diagnosis of obstructive
coronary artery disease. However, the technique is relatively new, and its full role is yet
to be defined in the clinical setting of a chest pain clinic. The investigators do not at
present have any information as to whether it is able to speed up the diagnosis, reduce the
need for other tests, and therefore also costs.
In this trial, the investigators aim to examine the accuracy and cost effectiveness of CTA
in patients with suspected cardiac chest pain presenting to a chest pain clinic, when
compared to the more established techniques like s-ECG, myocardial perfusion scanning and
coronary angiography. The study will enable us to establish the optimal and most cost
effective strategy for investigation of patients presenting to chest pain clinics.
Study Objectives:
- To assess the diagnostic accuracy and cost effectiveness of non-invasive coronary
angiogram by Cardiac CT in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease in patients with
angina, in the setting of Rapid Access Chest Pain clinics
- To formulate an optimal diagnostic algorithm in terms of accuracy and cost
effectiveness for diagnosis of CAD in patients with chest pain.
Study Setting:
- Rapid Access Chest Pain clinics in 3 NHS hospitals (Barnet, Chase Farm and the Royal Free
hospitals)
Target Population:
- Patients with new onset, stable exertional angina presenting to Rapid Access Chest Pain
clinics.
Study Design and Methodology:
This trial is designed as a prospective randomized case - control study. 600 patients who
meet the study criteria will be recruited from Rapid Access Chest Pain Clinics. The patients
will be randomized into 2 cohorts (study and control) of 300 each. All patients will undergo
stress - ECG at the referring hospital. Patients in the control group will receive the
'standard clinical care'. Their management is not altered by their inclusion in the trial.
All patients in the study group will undergo CT coronary Angiography at the Clinical Imaging
and Research Centre based at the Wellington Hospital. Patients with obstructive coronary
artery disease (defined as >50% stenosis in left main coronary artery or >70% stenosis in
one of the other major epicardial coronary arteries) will be referred for invasive coronary
angiography +/- revascularization. Patients with intermediate (50-70%) coronary stenosis
will be referred to myocardial perfusion scan (MPS). Patients with significant reversible
ischemia on MPS will be referred to invasive coronary angiography +/- revascularization.
Patients who do not have evidence of significant reversible ischemia on MPS and those with
<50% stenosis on CT coronary angiogram will be discharged on appropriate medications. All
patients will be followed up for 12 months after recruitment. Information will be gathered
regarding clinical events (non-fatal/fatal MI, acute coronary syndrome, hospitalization,
emergency/elective revascularization) and quality of life as per SF-36 questionnaire. All
the diagnostic and therapeutic procedures underwent by each patient in both cohorts will be
recorded. The cost-effectiveness of each CT coronary angiography will be calculated by using
the NHS reference costs.
Primary outcome measure: The total cost of diagnosis for current diagnostic strategy being
used in the Rapid Access Chest Pain Clinics and a new strategy involving the use of CT
coronary angiography in the investigation of patients with angina.
Secondary outcome measures:
- Diagnostic Accuracy of CT coronary angiography
- Prognostic value of CT coronary angiography
- Number of normal angiograms in each cohort
- Number of angiograms not followed by revascularization in each cohort
- Quality of life as assessed by SF-36 Questionnaire
For calculating cost effectiveness, NHS reference costs will be used. Thus, the costs and
benefits will be considered from the NHS perspective
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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