Heart Failure, Congestive Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prospective Evaluation Of Biventricular Pacing In Patients With Left Ventricular Dysfunction After Cardiovascular Surgery
Verified date | April 2011 |
Source | William Beaumont Hospitals |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Interventional |
Congestive heart failure (CHF) is a medical condition that is due to left ventricular
systolic dysfunction (LVSD). LVSD is a decreased ability of the heart to pump blood forward.
There are 5 million people in the United States that have CHF and 52,828 new cases are
diagnosed annually. There are 995,000 hospital visits and 52,828 deaths annually due to CHF.
Previous studies have shown that people with this condition are at a higher risk for
complications immediately after any type of heart surgery than are normal individuals. This
includes increased dependence on medications and devices to improve the pumping function of
the heart and blood pressure. Additionally, they also have longer lengths of hospital stay
and higher rates of death compared to normal individuals.
Some patients with LVSD not only have a decreased pumping ability of the heart, they also
have an inefficient pumping function. These patients have been shown to benefit from a
device therapy known as biventricular pacing. Biventricular pacing involves simultaneously
electrically stimulating the two major pumping chambers of the heart known as ventricles
using a pacemaker and wires. This causes a more coordinated contraction of the heart
chambers resulting in improvement in the pumping ability of the heart and blood pressure.
Studies have confirmed that in these patients, implantation of a biventricular pacemaker
improves patients' symptoms and quality of life as well as decreasing a need for future
hospitalizations. Whether biventricular pacing in patients with LVSD improves patient
outcomes after heart surgery has not been investigated.
Some patients temporarily develop slow heart rates after cardiovascular surgery. These slow
heart rates can cause a decrease in the blood pumped from the heart and result in low blood
pressures. Therefore, all patients undergoing cardiovascular surgery, regardless of left
ventricular function, receive temporary pacing wires that are placed on one of the
ventricles during the surgery. Temporary pacing will result in an increase in heart rate and
improvement in the amount of blood pumped by the heart and in blood pressure. The placement
of these wires is precautionary as only a few patients need to be paced for slow heart
rates. Once patients are felt to no longer require them, the wires are easily removed. The
purpose of this study is to determine whether biventricular pacing immediately after heart
surgery in patients with LVSD will improve in-hospital outcomes.
Patients that are scheduled for heart surgery and meet the inclusion criteria will be
approached for consent to participate in this study. Once consented, they will be randomized
to one of three treatment arms: usual care, RV pacing (single ventricle pacing), or
biventricular pacing. Randomization is a process similar to picking numbers out of a hat.
The patients will then undergo surgery as scheduled. During the surgery, the patients will
receive the temporary pacing wires on both ventricles instead of one. Immediately after
surgery, the patients will receive either usual care, RV pacing, or biventricular pacing
depending upon the treatment arm that they were randomized to. The pacing wires will be
removed as soon as the patients become stable as per routine. The clinical, operative, and
in-hospital characteristics of these patients will be recorded on specialized forms. The
characteristics of those that received biventricular pacing will be compared to those that
had RV or no pacing to see whether there was any benefit to this mode of therapy.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 40 |
Est. completion date | October 2006 |
Est. primary completion date | October 2006 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Age > 18 years - Planned CABG and/or valve surgery - LVEF < 30% - Able to give written informed consent Exclusion Criteria: - Enrollment in other research protocols - Inability to give written informed consent - Pregnancy |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | William Beaumont Hospital | Royal Oak | Michigan |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
William Beaumont Hospitals | Haines, David MD |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Length of ICU stay | |||
Secondary | In-hospital mortality | |||
Secondary | Length of hospital stay | |||
Secondary | Duration of inotropic support | |||
Secondary | Duration of intraaortic ballon pump support | |||
Secondary | Duration of mechanical ventillation | |||
Secondary | Change in stroke volume with biventricular pacing | |||
Secondary | Change in ventricular synchrony with biventricular pacing |
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