Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Neurodevelopmental disability is now recognized as the most common long-term complication after cardiac surgery in neonates. Research studies have shown that progesterone is critical to the development of the brain and in a variety of clinical situations including brain injury can protect the brain. The purpose of this research study is to determine whether progesterone administered during the 3rd trimester of pregnancy (24-39 weeks) to pregnant women protects the brain of unborn babies with CHD and improves their neurodevelopmental outcomes after heart surgery.


Clinical Trial Description

In the United States, approximately 1 in every 100 newborns is diagnosed with congenital heart disease (CHD). Many of these newborns (25%-35%) will require either corrective or palliative open heart surgery. As recently as the 1960's, only 20% of newborns with critical CHD survived to adulthood. Today, thanks to better diagnostic technologies and methods (including prenatal diagnosis), advances in surgery, and improved postoperative care, early survival is over 90%. However, with improved early outcomes has come the sobering recognition that there is an ongoing risk of late mortality, as well as significant morbidity for these children. In particular, neurodevelopmental disability is now recognized as the most common complication of critical CHD (i.e. those patients requiring cardiac surgery in infancy) and has the most negative impact on quality of life, academic performance and opportunity for independence as an adult. The altered fetal hemodynamics secondary to CHD lead to decreased blood flow and/or oxygen delivery to the fetal brain. In turn, this impairment in blood flow and oxygenation results in impaired brain growth and altered structural and cellular maturation, particularly of the white matter. Fetal MRI studies have shown that during the third trimester, normally a time of rapid brain growth and development, brains of infants with CHD fail to grow at the same rate as the brains of fetuses without CHD. This growth delay results in microcephaly, immature cellular elements of the white matter and decreased cortical folding at birth. It has been demonstrated that brain immaturity at birth is a primary major risk factor underlying the hypoxic-ischemic white matter brain injury and subsequent neurodevelopmental disability seen in over 50% of infants following surgery for CHD. In addition, there is increasing evidence in the CHD population that even late pre-term birth (prior to 39 weeks GA) is associated with increased mortality, increased peri-operative morbidity, and worse neurodevelopmental outcomes. Progesterone is an essential hormone in the occurrence and maintenance of pregnancy. Progesterone administration has also been shown to be neuroprotective in a variety of clinical situations, including traumatic brain injury (TBI). Sex steroid hormones, including progesterone, are critically involved in axonal myelination, forming the basis of white matter connectivity in the central nervous system (CNS). Progesterone and its metabolites not only promote the viability and regeneration of neurons, but also act on myelinating glial cell oligodendrocytes in the CNS and play an important role in the formation of myelin sheaths. Progesterone has also been shown to increase myelination and enhance maturation of immature oligodendrocytes progenitor cells to mature oligodendrocytes, which are more resistant to hypoxic/ischemic injury. Therapeutic administration of progesterone has also been demonstrated to prevent preterm birth. Thus, there are two potential mechanisms by which pre-natal progesterone therapy may improve neurodevelopmental outcomes in neonates with CHD: 1) a direct neuroprotective effect, and 2) decreasing the occurrence of pre-term birth. Study Objectives Primary: Develop preliminary evidence to support a multi-institutional study to determine whether, in women carrying fetuses (maternal-fetal dyad) with CHD, prophylactic vaginal natural progesterone therapy is neuroprotective, and compared to placebo improves neurodevelopmental outcomes at 18 months of age. Secondary: Develop preliminary evidence to support a multi-institutional study to determine whether, in women carrying fetuses (maternal-fetal dyad) with CHD, prophylactic vaginal natural progesterone therapy is neuroprotective, and compared to placebo: 1. improves fetal brain growth and maturation, 2. increases myelination during fetal brain development, 3. reduces pre-operative brain white matter injury, and 4. reduces post-operative white matter injury. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02133573
Study type Interventional
Source Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
Start date July 2014
Completion date November 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05654272 - Development of CIRC Technologies
Recruiting NCT04992793 - Paediatric Brain Injury Following Cardiac Interventions
Recruiting NCT05213598 - Fontan Associated Liver Disease and the Evaluation of Biomarkers for Disease Severity Assessment
Completed NCT04136379 - Comparison of Home and Standard Clinic Monitoring of INR in Patients With CHD
Completed NCT04814888 - 3D Airway Model for Pediatric Patients
Recruiting NCT04920643 - High-exchange ULTrafiltration to Enhance Recovery After Pediatric Cardiac Surgery N/A
Completed NCT05934578 - Lymphatic Function in Patients With Fontan Circulation: Effect of Physical Training N/A
Recruiting NCT06041685 - Effect of Local Warming for Arterial Catheterization in Pediatric Anesthesia N/A
Recruiting NCT05902013 - Video Laryngoscopy Versus Direct Laryngoscopy for Nasotracheal Intubation N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05687292 - Application of a Clinical Decision Support System to Reduce Mechanical Ventilation Duration After Cardiac Surgery
Not yet recruiting NCT05524324 - Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy in Adult Congenital Heart Disease With Systemic Right Ventricle: RIGHT-CRT N/A
Completed NCT02746029 - Cardiac Murmurs in Children: Predictive Value of Cardiac Markers
Completed NCT03119090 - Fontan Imaging Biomarkers (FIB) Study
Completed NCT02537392 - Multi-micronutrient Supplementation During Peri-conception and Congenital Heart Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT02258724 - Swiss National Registry of Grown up Congenital Heart Disease Patients
Terminated NCT02046135 - Sodium Bicarbonate to Prevent Acute Kidney Injury in Children Undergoing Cardiac Surgery Phase 2
Completed NCT01966237 - Milrinone Pharmacokinetics and Acute Kidney Injury
Recruiting NCT01184404 - Bosentan Improves Clinical Outcome of Adults With Congenital Heart Disease or Mitral Valve Lesions Who Undergo CArdiac Surgery N/A
Completed NCT01548950 - Drug Therapy and Surgery in Congenital Heart Disease With Pulmonary Hypertension N/A
Completed NCT01178710 - Effect of Simvastatin on Cardiac Function N/A