Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04666584 |
Other study ID # |
Odense University Hospital |
Secondary ID |
S-20200114 |
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 14, 2020 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
September 2023 |
Source |
Odense University Hospital |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The aim of the study is to investigate if lesion preparation with a ScoreFlex balloon
compared to a standard non-compliant balloon improve vascular healing and minimize lumen
reduction after implantation of a Magmaris bioresorbable scaffold.
Description:
Introduction: Ischemic heart disease (IHD) is characterized by progressive atherosclerosis in
coronary arteries and may cause coronary artery stenosis or acute thrombus and occlusion. IHD
is often treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with balloon dilatation and
implantation of a stent. The drug-eluting stents (DES) have been developed to minimize
neointimal growth after implantation and reduce the risk of in-stent restenosis compared to
bare-metal stents (BMS). Newer devices, bioresorbable scaffold (BRS), are made from a
bioresorbable material slowly dissolving after implantation. The BRS guarantees optimal
vessel support after balloon dilatation and implantation, but the artery can obtain original
function and flexibility after the BRS has vanished. The development of the Magmaris BRS,
with its improved radial strength, thinner struts compared to previous BRSs, is developed to
reduce the complications seen in earlier generation BRS such as recoil, fracture and late
stent thrombosis.
Previous studies have shown that coronary lesions treated with the previous generation of the
Magmaris BRS resulted on lumen area reduction, possibly a consequence by increased plaque
burden, compromising the scaffold area, combined with increased neointimal formation in the
early phase of vascular healing and fast resolution.
Due to decreased radial strength of the BRS compared to metal stents, modification of plaque
prior to BRS-implantation is necessary. The ScoreFlex balloon is a non-compliant balloon with
circumference of fixated, scoring elements and permits controlled expansion and fragmentation
of calcified plaque, compared to standard treatments with a non-compliant balloon.
Intravascular imaging with Intravascular Ultrasound (IVUS) and Optical Coherence Tomography
(OCT) can assess the morphology and location of plaques in the coronary stenosis prior to PCI
thereby optimizing the implantation. The scaffold-treated segment can also be evaluated with
intravascular imaging components such as stent coverage, malapposition and neointimal
hyperplasia, but only if the scaffold is visible. If the scaffold is dissolved, another
method to assess the vascular healing is needed. IVUS can evaluate change in elastic external
membrane (EEM), change in remodeling and minimal lumen area (MLA). The reduction in MLA is
associated with increased neointimal hyperplasia and plaque burden in the vessel wall.
The aim of the study is to investigate if lesion preparation with a ScoreFlex balloon
compared to a standard non-compliant balloon improve vascular healing and minimize lumen
reduction after implantation of a Magmaris bioresorbable scaffold.
Method: The study is designed as a prospective randomized trial conduced at a single center
(Odense University Hospital, Denmark). Eighty-two patients with stable angina pectoris and
non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarctions are included, if they meet the criteria.
Pre-dilatation with a 2.0 mm balloon is performed followed by pre-interventional IVUS and
OCT. Patients are randomized to lesion preparation and pre-dilatation with either the
ScoreFlex balloon or a standard non-compliant balloon with a 1:1 balloon-to-artery ratio by
measuring the reference segments. The residual stenosis should be less than 20 %. If the
pre-dilatation goal is not achieved, up-scaling to a balloon 0,5 mm larger is allowed. The
lesion is treated with implantation of a Magmaris scaffold. Finally, IVUS and OCT-images of
the final result are obtained. Follow-up IVUS and OCT images are performed after 6 and 12
months.
Post-PCI OCT-images are analyzed at baseline and 6 and 12 months after index procedure.
Change in MLA in the stented segment is measured with IVUS and OCT. The vascular healing is
based on finding from the OCT images.
The study is submitted and approved by the Regional Committees on Health Research Ethics for
Southern Denmark (Project-ID: S-20200114) and Danish Data Agency (Journal nr.: 20/49900)
Statistics: Assuming data are normally distributed, categorical data will be presented as
numbers and frequencies and compared using chi2-test. Continuous data will be presented as
mean ± SD and compared using Student t-test- SPSS version 26.0 will be used for the
statistical analysis.
The estimated sample size is based on data, from the HONEST study by Fallesen et al. The
reduction of MLA from 6.99 mm2 to 5.01 mm (27%) 6 months after implantation of a Magmaris
BRS, represented the expected reference group. Optimal lesion preparation with pre-dilatation
with a ScoreFlex balloon is estimated to minimize MLA reduction from 6.99 mm2 to 6.22 mm2
(11%). A power calculation is conducted using the expected MLA after 6 months (6.22 mm2 for
the ScoreFlex balloon and 5.01 mm2 for the standard non-compliant balloon). Inclusion of 35
patients in each group is necessary to reach statistical significance in case of 2-tailed
significance level of 0.05 and power of 80 %. Loss to follow-up and poor image quality
finalize an expected drop-out rate of 15 %, thereby requiring 82 patients in total.