Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The ORACLE study is an observational cohort study designed to explore the feasibility of providing an assessment of chest pain for patients with suspected angina within one working day of referral to specialist services. The primary objective is to determine the feasibility of delivering an objective assessment of risk for participants who have been referred by their primary care provider to the rapid access chest pain clinic with possible angina in a community setting using point of care and patient facing technologies within one working day of referral. Participants will complete a digital health questionnaire, at home, that asks about their risk factors for coronary artery disease, past medical history and their symptoms. Patients will then have a standard 12 lead ECG and perform their own personal ECG. They will then have high sensitivity cardiac troponin measured by point of care high sensitivity cardiac troponin assays as well as a core lab assay. The results of all of the above will allow patients to be started as low, intermediate or high risk for future cardiovascular events.


Clinical Trial Description

Recent onset of angina is a clinical manifestation of unstable or progressive coronary artery disease and is a common presentation within primary care. Evaluation can be challenging as access to objective measures of risk and diagnostic testing are limited in this setting. Due to capacity, not all patients referred to the rapid access chest pain clinic can be reviewed within this clinic. Patients are often high risk with suspected obstructive coronary artery disease, and the aim should be for review, assessment and if required, initiation of therapy, without undue delay. This study has been designed to explore the feasibility of delivering a virtual chest pain assessment for patients with new onset chest pain. It is an observational cohort study, that uses a combination of digital tools to capture relevant patient information and clinical history, point-of-care high-sensitivity cardiac troponin testing and electrocardiography. This pathway will aim to provide an objective assessment of risk on the next working day following primary care contact to all patients referred to the rapid access chest pain clinic. On completion of this assessment patients will be stratified to low, intermediate or high risk groups based on their symptoms, risk factors, point of care troponin value (ng/l) and ECG. The results will not be made available to the clinical team unless the patients was at risk of harm (acute coronary syndrome or arrhythmia). Patients will return to receive routine clinical care. The investigators plan to recruit 300 participants or for six months, whatever arises first. Participants can only be recruited once during the study period. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06325020
Study type Observational
Source University of Edinburgh
Contact Michael McDermott, MBChB
Phone 07966024516
Email michael.mcdermott@ed.ac.uk
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase
Start date May 1, 2024
Completion date February 28, 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06030596 - SPECT Myocardial Blood Flow Quantification for Diagnosis of Ischemic Heart Disease Determined by Fraction Flow Reserve
Completed NCT04080700 - Korean Prospective Registry for Evaluating the Safety and Efficacy of Distal Radial Approach (KODRA)
Recruiting NCT03810599 - Patient-reported Outcomes in the Bergen Early Cardiac Rehabilitation Study N/A
Recruiting NCT06002932 - Comparison of PROVISIONal 1-stent Strategy With DEB Versus Planned 2-stent Strategy in Coronary Bifurcation Lesions. N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06032572 - Evaluation of the Safety and Effectiveness of the VRS100 System in PCI (ESSENCE) N/A
Recruiting NCT05308719 - Nasal Oxygen Therapy After Cardiac Surgery N/A
Recruiting NCT04242134 - Drug-coating Balloon Angioplasties for True Coronary Bifurcation Lesions N/A
Completed NCT04556994 - Phase 1 Cardiac Rehabilitation With and Without Lower Limb Paddling Effects in Post CABG Patients. N/A
Recruiting NCT05846893 - Drug-Coated Balloon vs. Drug-Eluting Stent for Clinical Outcomes in Patients With Large Coronary Artery Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT06027788 - CTSN Embolic Protection Trial N/A
Recruiting NCT05023629 - STunning After Balloon Occlusion N/A
Completed NCT04941560 - Assessing the Association Between Multi-dimension Facial Characteristics and Coronary Artery Diseases
Completed NCT04006288 - Switching From DAPT to Dual Pathway Inhibition With Low-dose Rivaroxaban in Adjunct to Aspirin in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease Phase 4
Completed NCT01860274 - Meshed Vein Graft Patency Trial - VEST N/A
Recruiting NCT06174090 - The Effect of Video Education on Pain, Anxiety and Knowledge Levels of Coronary Bypass Graft Surgery Patients N/A
Terminated NCT03959072 - Cardiac Cath Lab Staff Radiation Exposure
Completed NCT03968809 - Role of Cardioflux in Predicting Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) Outcomes
Recruiting NCT05065073 - Iso-Osmolar vs. Low-Osmolar Contrast Agents for Optical Coherence Tomography Phase 4
Recruiting NCT04566497 - Assessment of Adverse Outcome in Asymptomatic Patients With Prior Coronary Revascularization Who Have a Systematic Stress Testing Strategy Or a Non-testing Strategy During Long-term Follow-up. N/A
Completed NCT05096442 - Compare the Safety and Efficacy of Genoss® DCB and SeQuent® Please NEO in Coronary De Novo Lesions N/A