Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04680689 |
Other study ID # |
CM0520-FUSEH |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 30, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
January 1, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2022 |
Source |
Cardio Med Medical Center |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The aim of the Fused-Heart study is to investigate the impact of a coronary artery stenosis
on myocardial function and viability, based on advanced fusion imaging techniques derived
from CCTA.
Moreover the study will investigate the correlation between morphology and composition of
atheromatous plaques located in a coronary artery and myocardial ischemia in the territory
irrigated by the same coronary artery.
Description:
The FUSE-HEART study is a prospective, observational, single-center, cohort study that will
be conducted in the Laboratory of Advanced Research in Cardiac Multimodal Imaging of Cardio
Med Medical Center Targu Mures, Romania.
The study will include 100 subjects with coronary lesions depicted by CCTA examination. The
study population will consist in: (1) patients with anatomically significant coronary lesions
(at least 50% luminal narrowing) on native coronary arteries, or (2) patients surviving an
acute myocardial infarction, revascularized or not. In all patients, presence of
vulnerability features in the atheromatous plaques will be studied and the vulnerability
score will be calculated for each plaque, consisting in one point added for each of the
following vulnerability markers: positive remodeling, napkin-rink sign, presence of low
density plaque or spotty calcium within the plaque. In addition, following 3D fusion of the
images of the coronary tree with the images reflecting wall motion, the correspondence
between plaque morphology and composition on one hand, and wall motion in the corresponding
distribution territory of that coronary artery, will be studied based on fused models.
The study will be conducted over a period of 2 years, in which patients will be examined at
baseline, with a projected recruitment period of 1 year and will be followed-up 1 year for
MACE.
Study objectives:
Primary: to investigate the impact of a coronary artery stenosis on myocardial function and
viability, based on advanced fusion imaging techniques derived from CCTA.
Secondary: to investigate the correlation between morphology and composition of atheromatous
plaques located in a coronary artery and myocardial ischemia in the territory irrigated by
the same coronary artery.
Study timeline:
• Baseline (day 0)-Obtain and document consent from participant on study consent form.
Verify inclusion/exclusion criteria. Obtain demographic information, medical history,
medication history, alcohol and tobacco use history. Record results of physical examinations
and 12-lead ECG.Collect blood specimens (complete blood count, biochemistry and inflammatory
biomarkers).Imaging procedures: CCTA-Image processing - quantification of coronary stenosis,
characterization of vulnerability markers, 3D reconstruction, extension and characterization
of wall motion. Deliver fused 3D images
• Visit 1 (month 1)-Record results of physical examinations, 12-lead ECG, blood pressure, and
medical history. MACE assessment Visit 2 (month 3) -Telephone visit with target questions,
all the answers recorded in study forms Visit 3 (month 6) - Record results of physical
examinations, 12-lead ECG, blood pressure, and medical history. MACE assessment
Final study visit (month 12)- Record results of physical examinations, medical
history,12-lead ECG, blood pressure, transthoracic 2-D echocardiography. End-point and MACE
evaluation.
Study procedures:
- Medical history, clinical examination, laboratory tests (complete blood count,
biochemistry, inflammatory biomarkers: hs-CRP, MMP, IL6 and NT-pro-BNP);
- 12-lead ECG
- 2D transthoracic echocardiography
- CCTA
- Computerized postprocessing and fused images
Data collection:
All the information will be collected in a dedicated database including medical history,
medication, imaging features provided by cardiac ultrasound, CCTA and fused images resulting
from imaging post-processing.