Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Quantitative Assessment of the Peripheral Artery Collateral Circulation in Patients With and Without Coronary Artery Disease (Pilot Study)
Concerning the promotion of peripheral collateral growth, clinical studies investigating new therapeutic strategies have used imprecise assessment methods and therefore determined only "weak" endpoints. In contrast to the coronary circulation, there is currently no gold standard available to document successful promotion of collateral growth in patients suffering from peripheral artery disease. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to evaluate a new invasive method to quantify arterial collateral flow in the lower extremity in patients undergoing elective coronary angiography.
Background: Peripheral artery disease (PAD) of the lower extremities is due to arterial
obstruction leading to reduced arterial flow during exercise and/or at rest. The disease is
present in approximately 4 percent of persons >40 years of age, but in 15-20 percent of
those >65 years. Claudication is the major symptom and can improve with pharmacotherapy or
exercise rehabilitation. In patients with disabling claudication that persist despite
exercise and pharmacotherapy or with critical limb ischemia (i.e. ischemic rest pain; ulcers
or gangrene at risk of major amputation), revascularization therapies are indicated.
However, in about 1/4 of these patients endovascular or surgical therapy fails or is not
applicable, making alternative approaches necessary.1 Thus, promotion of angiogenesis, a
process triggered by ischemia with sprouting of capillaries insufficient to provide adequate
blood supply to jeopardized tissues, and arteriogenesis, which refers to positive remodeling
of preformed collateral arterioles, i.e. collateral growth should be applied in these
patients.2, 3 Despite the fact that numerous studies during the last decade pursued the
important therapeutic strategy of improving collateral function in patients with PAD, there
is currently no method available to quantify collateral arterial function of the lower limb
and, thus, to determine therapeutic effects. Clinical studies investigating new therapeutic
strategies for the promotion of peripheral collateral growth by application of growth
factors and/or exercise rehabilitation have used imprecise and inadequate assessment methods
and therefore determined only "weak" endpoints. In contrast to the coronary circulation,
there is currently no gold standard available to document successful promotion of collateral
growth in patients suffering from PAD.
Aim: The purpose of this study in patients undergoing elective coronary angiography with or
without chronic stable coronary artery disease is to evaluate a new invasive method to
quantify arterial collateral flow in the lower extremity.
Main hypothesis: Quantitative assessment of peripheral arterial collaterals by
pressure-derived collateral flow index (CFIp) in the lower extremities is safe and feasible.
Methodology: Prospective exploratory trial. Primary study endpoint: Pressure-derived
collateral flow index (CFIp) of the superficial femoral artery.
Potential significance: The results of this study will demonstrate that the concept of
collateral flow index - which has been proven by our group in the coronary circulation - is
a safe and feasible method for the quantitative assessment of peripheral limb collateral
function. The results of this study may serve as preliminary data for larger clinical trials
investigating therapeutic promotion of collaterals in patients with PAD and provide a
reliable study endpoint.
;
Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
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