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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04268875
Other study ID # RBHP 2019 SOUTEYRAND
Secondary ID 2019-A02305-52
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date December 11, 2019
Est. completion date December 6, 2022

Study information

Verified date April 2023
Source University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The statistical risk of intrastent stenosis has fallen considerably with the emergence of latest generation coated stents (drug-eluting stents: DES). The number and clinical lifespan of stents implanted over the last twenty-five years, however, explain the fact that restenosis remains a not unusual clinical problem which is expressed as a recurrence of angina or of an acute coronary syndrome (ACS). The mechanisms involved in this restenosis are multifactorial in nature and differ depending on the type of stent and the time since the restenosis occurred. In symptomatic stent restenosis (angina or acute coronary syndrome), a further angioplasty is usually required, occasionally on an emergency basis. Coronary angiography is often not capable of explaining the mechanical causes of this complication. Optical coherence tomography (OCT), a high-resolution endocoronary imaging technique can assist in the understanding of the mechanism of restenosis and guide treatment. OCT during angiography provides a detailed analysis of the stents and potential complications: the presence of neoatherosclerosis with or without plaque rupture, intimal hyperplasia, stent under-deployment, stent fracture and distal or proximal progression of the atherosclerosis. The investigators propose a prospective, multicentre study of all cases of intrastent restenosis, examined by angiography, causing clinical features involving stable angina and acute coronary syndrome. The coronary artery involved will be routinely studied by OCT for a mechanical cause of the intrastent restenosis. The routine use of intrastent OCT may assist in the understanding of causes of restenosis and in the decision on appropriate treatment. There are several possible treatments for restenosis, including balloon angioplasty, coated balloon angioplasty, stenting or aorto-coronary bypass graft surgery.


Description:

All stented coronary artery patients hospitalised for stable angina or an ACS requiring a further coronary angiogram (regardless of time since implantation or type of the initial stent) identified to have intrastent restenosis during coronary angiography will be included after being informed and obtaining their informed written consent. - For cases of stable angina the OCT the will be performed immediately with insertion of the probe distal to the area being studied and then automatic retraction of the fibre during injection of the contrast medium. - For ACS, the OCT will be performed immediately or on a deferred basis at the discretion of the operator. - For critical lesions which prevent the OCT fibre passing across the lesion, "soft" predilatation with a 2 mm or smaller balloon is permitted. - Practical conduct of the OCT: - Pullback at baseline state and analysis of the stent with a 5 mm margin proximal and distal to the lesion. - OCT analysis: under-deployment of the stent (expansion < 80% of the reference mean surface area), neoatherosclerosis with or without rupture, homogeneous or non-homogeneous hyperplasia, stent fracture and proximal or distal progression of the atherosclerosis. - Final pullback in cases of a new angioplasty (balloon angioplasty, angioplasty with a coated balloon or stenting). - The OCT investigations will be anonymised and registered in their original format with a view to centralised reading (Corelab ISIT, UMR 6284-CNRS, Clermont-Ferrand University). - The angiography records will be submitted for reading by a panel blinded to the OCT for the purposes of demonstrating the added value of OCT in the fine details of diagnosis and the impact of a treatment decision. The angiograms will be reviewed in a centralised analytical laboratory, which will re-read the procedures blind. - Patients will be followed up via telephone contact or visit one year after inclusion into the study to record any complications which have developed (possible myocardial infarction, reason, any new revascularisation of the target lesion or another artery and reason for this, any deaths and their causes).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 307
Est. completion date December 6, 2022
Est. primary completion date December 6, 2022
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Men or women, aged 18 years and over. - Uncoated, coated or bioresorbable stent restenosis, defined by lumen obstruction of over 50% in the stent and/or within 5 mm proximal or distal to the stent found on coronary angiography. - Patients treated for an acute coronary syndrome in which restenosis is suspected. It is recommended that OCT be performed after restoring TIMI grade 3 coronary flow in the initial investigation or in a later review at < 7 days. - Patient informed consent. - Subscription to a social security system. Exclusion Criteria: - Technical inability to perform the OCT (distal lesions, severe chronic renal failure). - Contraindication to the use of ABBOTT systems when insertion of any type of catheter represents a risk to the patient. The contraindications include the following: - Bacteraemia or septicaemia - Significant coagulation system abnormalities - Patients in whom coronary artery spasm has been diagnosed - Patients who do not meet the criteria for coronary artery bypass grafting - Patients who do not meet the criteria for percutaneous coronary angioplasty - Severe haemodynamic shock or instability - Total occlusion - Life expectancy of under one year for non-cardiac reasons. - Pregnant or breast-feeding women or women who are fertile and not taking appropriate contraceptives. - Patients under legal protection or guardianship

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT)
The OCT fibre is an optical fibre catheter containing a lens located at its extremity and positioned distal to the arterial segment to be examined. This is an intracoronary, very high-resolution section technique based on absorption and reflection of close infrared light by stents and tissues. OCT analysis is performed during a usual coronary angiography procedure. It is a common technique already used and recommended for intrastent restenosis to establish the mechanism of the process. No new product is being tested. The examination performed is the same.

Locations

Country Name City State
Belgium Université- Hôpital Leuven Leuven
France Clinique la Roseraie Aubervilliers
France CH Avignon Avignon
France CHRU Besançon Besançon
France CHU Bordeaux Bordeaux
France CHRU Morvan Brest
France Hôpital privé saint Martin Cauro
France Centre Hospitalier les Hôpitaux de Chartres Chartres
France CHU Clermont Ferrand Clermont-Ferrand Auvergne
France CHRU Grenoble Alpes Grenoble
France Centre Hospitalier Départemental Vendée La Roche-sur-Yon
France CHRU Lille Lille
France Centre Hospitalier Saint Joseph Saint Luc Lyon
France Hospices Civiles Lyon Lyon
France AP-HM Marseille
France CHRU Nîmes Nîmes
France Polyclinique les fleurs Ollioules
France AP-HP Paris
France Hôpital Privé Institut Mutualiste Montsouris Paris
France CHRU Poitiers Poitiers
France Clinique Saint Hilaire Rouen
France CHRU Strasbourg Strasbourg
France Clinique Pasteur Toulouse Toucy
France CHRU Toulouse Toulouse
France CHRU Hôpitaux de Tours Tours
Switzerland CH de Bern Bern
Switzerland CHUV de Lausanne Lausanne

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand Abbott, Corelab ISIT

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

Belgium,  France,  Switzerland, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Characteristics of morphological abnormalities, seen on OCT on millimetre sections of the whole stented segment (5 mm proximally and distally to the stent), potentially responsible for the intrastent restenosis Under-deployment of the stent with percentage under-deployment is defined when the minimum intrastent surface area is less than 80% of the reference surface area. day 0
Primary Characteristics of morphological abnormalities, seen on OCT on millimetre sections of the whole stented segment (5 mm proximally and distally to the stent), potentially responsible for the intrastent restenosis Homogeneous or non-homogeneous intimal hyperplasia. day 0
Primary Characteristics of morphological abnormalities, seen on OCT on millimetre sections of the whole stented segment (5 mm proximally and distally to the stent), potentially responsible for the intrastent restenosis Presence of neoatherosclerosis, with or without rupture. day 0
Primary Characteristics of morphological abnormalities, seen on OCT on millimetre sections of the whole stented segment (5 mm proximally and distally to the stent), potentially responsible for the intrastent restenosis Stent fracture . day 0
Primary Characteristics of morphological abnormalities, seen on OCT on millimetre sections of the whole stented segment (5 mm proximally and distally to the stent), potentially responsible for the intrastent restenosis Progression of the proximal or distal atherosclerosis . day 0
Secondary Clinical data time to onset of intrastent restenosis day 0
Secondary Clinical data sex day 0
Secondary Clinical data age day 0
Secondary Clinical data past history of angioplasty day 0
Secondary Clinical data myocardial infarction day 0
Secondary Clinical data coronary artery bypass grafting day 0
Secondary Clinical data multi-vessel disease day 0
Secondary Clinical data prosthetic valve day 0
Secondary Clinical data heart failure day 0
Secondary Clinical data chronic renal failure day 0
Secondary Clinical data atrial fibrillation day 0
Secondary Clinical data valve disease day 0
Secondary Clinical data vascular disease day 0
Secondary Clinical data CVA day 0
Secondary Clinical data TIA day 0
Secondary Cardiovascular risk factors hypertension day 0
Secondary Cardiovascular risk factors dyslipidaemia day 0
Secondary Cardiovascular risk factors diabetes day 0
Secondary Cardiovascular risk factors family history day 0
Secondary Cardiovascular risk factors overweight (BMI > 25) day 0
Secondary Cardiovascular risk factors smoking habit day 0
Secondary Blood sample Measure of LDL cholesterol day 0, day 365
Secondary Blood sample Measure of HDL cholesterol day 0, day 365
Secondary Blood sample Measure of triglycerides day 0, day 365
Secondary Blood sample Measure of HbA1c day 0, day 365
Secondary Blood sample Measure of creatinine day 0, day 365
Secondary Blood sample Measure of renal clearance day 0, day 365
Secondary New revascularisation events new revascularisation event in the target lesion or another artery, myocardial infarctions, deaths and causes of events day 365
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