Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Long Term Study on the Possible Beneficial Effects of Catheterised Renal Denervation in Patients With Heart Failure and Left Ventricular Systolic Dysfunction Who Are Already on Standard Medical Therapy.
It is a randomized prospective controlled study evaluating the effect of transcatheter renal denervation on the clinical status of patients with chronic heart failure and its safety procedures. The working hypothesis of the study is that by performing transcatheter renal denervation in patients with chronic heart failure and severe left ventricular systolic dysfunction there will a resultant reduction in the renal sympathetic activation which in turn will reduce the number of hospitalizations and deaths from heart failure.
Chronic heart failure in the European countries occurs in 2-3% of the population with a
significant increase in the higher age groups (1). Improved treatment of acute conditions
(especially myocardial infarction) has resulted in more patients entering into the category
of chronic heart failure. Chronic heart failure has a poor prognosis. Diagnosis and
treatment are challenging both medically and economically. Half of the patients with
systolic heart failure die within 4 years and more than 50% of patients with severe heart
failure (NYHA functional class of IV) die within one year (1). The current treatments for
heart failure are not only aimed at influencing the symptoms, but also preventing the
progression of heart failure to reduce mortality.
Heart failure leads to the activation of compensatory mechanisms designed to restore
adequate cardiac output. These mechanisms are initially beneficial, but their long-term
activation leads to further progression of the pathological process and deterioration of
cardiac function. One of the basic pathophysiological processes in heart failure is
excessive activation of the sympathetic nervous system. This causes increased levels of
circulating catecholamines which is proportional to the severity of the disease that is
patients with the highest levels of norepinephrine have the worst prognosis. Beta-blocker
therapy which is designed to inhibit activity of sympathetic nervous system causes milder
symptoms of heart failure in patients by modifying disturbed hemodynamics and ultimately the
clinical status. In recent years, the therapeutic efficacy of beta-blockers in chronic heart
failure has been verified in a number of controlled clinical trials (2-5). These studies
have confirmed that long-term treatment with beta-blocker therapy alleviates the symptoms of
heart failure, improves the clinical condition of the patients and reduces mortality like
ACE inhibitors.
High activity of renal sympathetic nerves in patients with chronic heart failure is an early
predictor of increased mortality (6). The main pathophysiological basis of this finding is
probably excessive sodium retention due to direct activation of sympathetic fibers
innervating renal tubules (7). Recent experimental work on animals have shown that surgical
renal denervation inhibits an increase in renal vascular resistance, prevents a decrease in
renal blood flow (8), and also prevents changes in expression of angiotensin receptors in
the kidney (8).
Surgical sympathectomy began to be used for the treatment of severe and malignant
hypertension more than 50 years ago. But this was a rather complicated procedure, which was
accompanied by a number of adverse effects (orthostatic hypotension and tachycardia,
shortness of breath, bowel and sexual disorders]. Moreover it required a long
hospitalization of 2-4 weeks and then required a recovery period of 1-2 months. However this
intervention led to a rapid decrease in pressure and a higher survival rate after surgery in
a large observational study(9).
In recent years a method has been developed in which destruction of renal sympathetic nerves
that are present in the adventitia of renal arterial walls is done by catheterization (10).
This procedure uses a catheter with a radiofrequency ablator at its tip (Symplicity, Ardian
/ Medtronic, USA), which is introduced through the femoral artery and then progressively
introduced into the renal arteries. A randomized study has demonstrated that this procedure
has a high degree of safety for the patients and a high rate of efficacy as well. In
patients with resistant hypertension treated with transcatheter renal denervation there was
a significant drop in blood pressure of 33/11 mmHg (p < 0.0001) that occurred after 6 months
compared to a control group receiving unmodified pharmacological treatment (11).
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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