Myocardial Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
MI-SPRINT (Myocardial Infarction - Stress PRevention INTervention): A Randomized Controlled Minimal Early Behavioral Intervention Trial to Reduce the Development of Posttraumatic Stress Caused by Acute Myocardial Infarction
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a mental disorder that may occur after someone
experiences a traumatic event. Between 10-20% of patients may develop PTSD in response to
the traumatic experience of myocardial infarction (MI). PTSD is associated with impaired
quality of life, social functioning, and high economic burden to the society. Posttraumatic
stress attributable to MI has also been shown to be predictive of poor cardiovascular
prognosis, whereby this link might relate to several atherothrombotic processes. Therefore
the prevention of PTSD after MI is of high relevance. Guidelines have been published for
early interventions to prevent the development of posttraumatic stress after different types
of trauma but not in terms of acute MI as a traumatic event.
The overarching aim of the planned trial is to test whether a minimal behavioral
intervention performed shortly after acute MI in patients at a high risk to develop PTSD and
in the setting of a coronary care unit reduces the development of posttraumatic stress.
The primary hypothesis is that posttraumatic stress levels at the 3-month follow-up will be
at least 20% lower in the intervention group than in the control group, and that this effect
will last up to 12 months after the intervention. The secondary hypothesis is that the
intervention group will show better psychosocial functioning, and a more favourable
cardiometabolic biomarker profile than the control group 3 and 12 month after the
intervention.
Background
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a mental disorder that may occur after someone
experiences a traumatic event. Between 10-20% of patients may develop PTSD in response to
the traumatic experience of myocardial infarction (MI). Sociodemographic and psychosocial
variables, including perceived distress during MI, have been identified as "risk factors"
for the development of posttraumatic stress in the aftermath of MI. PTSD is associated with
impaired quality of life, social functioning, and high economic burden to the society.
Posttraumatic stress attributable to MI has also been shown to be predictive of poor
cardiovascular prognosis, whereby this link might relate to atherothrombotic processes like
endothelial dysfunction, dyslipidemia, inflammation, and coagulation. Therefore the
prevention of PTSD after MI is of high relevance. Guidelines have been published for early
interventions to prevent the development of posttraumatic stress after different types of
trauma. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis on randomized controlled trials of
early psychological interventions designed to prevent symptoms of PTSD found a benefit, but
only if treatment was provided to symptomatic individuals and trauma-focused. The impact of
such an intervention on posttraumatic stress in response to a myocardial infarction has not
been assessed so far. The planned project is the first to test, if the development of
posttraumatic stress can successfully be prevented in MI patients at high risk to develop
PTSD through a minimal behavioral intervention that is feasible.
Objective
Primary aim: The overarching aim of the planned project is to investigate in a
randomized-controlled trial whether a minimal (single counseling session of 45 minutes plus
an information booklet) and early-on (within 48 hours after myocardial infarction)
administered behavioral intervention reduces the development of clinician-rated
posttraumatic stress levels attributable to MI in patients at a high risk to develop
clinically relevant levels of posttraumatic stress.
Secondary aim: A further aim is to investigate whether the behavioral intervention improves
psychosocial functioning and favorably affects cardiometabolic risk markers.
Methods
Patients considered to be at "high risk" to develop posttraumatic stress will be randomized
to one single counseling session of 45 minutes (either targeting specific MI-triggered
traumatic reactions or more general information about the role of psychological stress in
coronary heart disease). The session will be performed by the study therapist in the
coronary care unit within 48 hours after the patient has reached stable circulatory
condition. Each patient will additionally receive written study material in the form of an
information booklet. Medical variables, sociodemographic factors and cardiometabolic
biomarkers will also be determined.
At 3-month and 12-month follow-up each patient will be assessed for interviewer-rated
posttraumatic stress levels, psychosocial functioning, and biomarkers.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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