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Heart Transplant clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03346278 Terminated - Clinical trials for Myocardial Infarction

Text Message Intervention to Improve Cardiac Rehab Participation

Start date: November 7, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is strongly recommended for patients with coronary heart disease. However, patient enrollment and completion of cardiac rehabilitation is low. This study will examine if a mobile phone intervention that uses a text messaging program can successfully promote participation in cardiac rehabilitation.

NCT ID: NCT03222531 Active, not recruiting - Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

Expanding the Pool in Orthotopic Heart Transplantation

Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is an open-label, pilot trial to test the safety and efficacy of transplantation of hearts from HCV seropositive non-viremic (HCV Ab+/NAT-) and HCV seropositive viremic (HCV Ab+/NAT+) donors to HCV seronegative recipients on the heart transplant waitlist. Treatment and prophylaxis will be administered, using a transmission-triggered approach for the first scenario (HCV Ab+/NAT- donors, arm 1) and a prophylaxis approach for the later scenario (HCV Ab+/NAT+ donors, arm 2).

NCT ID: NCT03150095 Completed - Lung Transplant Clinical Trials

Health Coaching to Improve Self-Management in Thoracic Transplant Candidates

Start date: October 25, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Ability to adhere to complex medical regimens is critical to achieving successful transplant outcomes, as non-adherent patients suffer graft failure and death following transplantation. Since potential recipients greatly exceed organ availability, identification of candidates who will adhere to complex post-transplant regimens is critically important and emphasized by practice guidelines. When selecting candidates for transplant, physicians try to subjectively predict post-transplant adherence because, although tools exist to measure current adherence, tools that reliably predict future adherence are lacking. Despite rigorous medical and psychosocial screening pretransplant, non-adherence rates are high following transplant. Therefore, the current approach for predicting future non-adherence is suboptimal, subjective, and greatly needs strategies for improvement. Pre-transplant self-management abilities represent a marker of future adherence post-transplant. Assessing self-management as a means for predicting future adherence has been largely overlooked. Self-management is defined as "taking responsibility for one's own behavior and well-being" and consists of three management tasks: medical condition, emotions, and social roles. Self-management ability can be measured. However, self-management has not been systematically studied in heart and lung transplant patients. Fostering self-management abilities may improve post-transplant outcomes by optimizing not only adherence, but also proven pretransplant risk factors (e.g. frailty and obesity).Self-management abilities may be improved via behavioral interventions such as health coaching.Self-management represents a measurable criterion that could be utilized in pre-transplant screening and serve as a point of intervention for optimizing adherence and pre-transplant risk factors.The overall objective of the proposed research is to improve the knowledge gap regarding self-management (and thereby adherence) in transplant by qualitatively and quantitatively studying patient factors associated with self-management and testing an intervention that may improve self-management. The investigators hypothesize: Individualized health coaching including strategies to address poor resilience, coping with uncertainty, frailty, and/or negative affect will be an effective therapeutic strategy at improving self-management while in the pre-transplant state. Specific Aim: To test whether transplant candidates who receive pre transplant health coaching have greater improvement in self-management abilities. The investigators will conduct a randomized, controlled pilot trial testing the effectiveness of health coaching versus usual care in a heart and lung transplant cohort on self-management abilities (SMAS-30).

NCT ID: NCT02964026 Completed - Cardiac Surgery Clinical Trials

Study of Clinical Outcomes Associated With the Pulmonary Artery Catheter (PAC) in Cardiac Surgery Patients

Start date: September 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The primary objective for this retrospective Electronic Health Record (EHR) analysis is to evaluate the clinical outcomes associated with the utilization of a pulmonary artery catheter (PAC), for monitoring purposes, within patients undergoing cardiac surgeries (isolated coronary artery bypass graft [CABG], valve, aortic surgery, multi-procedures, other complex nonvalvular procedures and heart transplants). The study will be conducted using prospectively collected hospital inpatient data over a duration of over 5 years (Jan. 1, 2010 - June 30, 2015) using a large US electronic health database (Cerner HealthFacts; Kansas City, MO).

NCT ID: NCT02597543 Completed - Heart Transplant Clinical Trials

Stress Cardiac MRI for Evaluation of Nonspecific Allograft Dysfunction

Start date: November 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The investigators will use cardiac MRI to measure the myocardial perfusion reserve and amount of myocardial edema and fibrosis in heart-transplant patients with nonspecific allograft dysfunction in contrast to those with normal graft function. The investigators hypothesize that patients with nonspecific allograft dysfunction will demonstrate decreased myocardial perfusion reserve, related to microvascular allograft vasculopathy, compared to those with normal graft function.

NCT ID: NCT02554578 Active, not recruiting - Heart Transplant Clinical Trials

Impact of mHealth in Heart Transplant Management

mHeart
Start date: October 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to improve medication adherence, engagement and support to heart transplant patients through implementation of a new clinical care programme conducted by the clinical pharmacy service in cooperation with the heart transplant team and supported by mobile health (mHealth).

NCT ID: NCT02472002 Suspended - Coronary Disease Clinical Trials

Mesenchymal Stem Cell Administration in the Treatment of Coronary Graft Disease in Heart Transplant Patients

MESHT
Start date: January 2014
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

MES-HT is a pilot multicenter prospective study conducted in transplant patients who developed severe coronary vasculopathy. A preparation of autologous mesenchymal cells of bone marrow is administered by endomyocardial injection, guided by the Noga® cardiac mapping system. The main objective is to determine the effect of the administration of autologous mesenchymal cells of the bone marrow by intramyocardial injection on myocardial perfusion in cardiac transplant patients with severe coronary vasculopathy.

NCT ID: NCT02323321 Completed - Heart Transplant Clinical Trials

International EXPAND Heart Pivotal Trial

EXPANDHeart
Start date: September 16, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To evaluate the effectiveness of the OCS™ Heart to recruit, preserve and assess donor hearts that may not meet current standard donor heart acceptance criteria (as identified above) for transplantation to potentially improve donor heart utilization for transplantation

NCT ID: NCT02182986 Completed - Kidney Transplant Clinical Trials

Biomarkers for Post-Transplant Lymphoproliferative Disorders in Children

Start date: August 14, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Solid organ transplantation is an important therapeutic option for children with a variety of end stage diseases. However, the same immunosuppressive medications that are required to prevent the child's immune system from attacking and rejecting the transplanted organ can predispose these individuals to developing a very serious cancer that is linked to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV).

NCT ID: NCT02163629 Recruiting - Heart Transplant Clinical Trials

Impact of Stress Management Training After Cardiac Transplantation

QUIET
Start date: April 2015
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

In spite of major medical advances in heart transplant patients, psychiatric comorbidity remains very high in pre-and post-transplant phases. Anxiety and depression are especially frequent. They impact significantly morbidity and mortality. Especially because they are associated with poor therapeutic adherence and risks of infection and rejection. The inability to make beneficial therapeutic choice can be explained by the negative perception of events, associated with anxio-depressive disorders. This results in an important deterioration in quality of life of patients. The investigators assume that better management of emotions might reduce the stress of waiting situation and its psychopathological and somatic consequences pre-and post-transplant.