Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Anomalous Aortic Origin of the Coronary Arteries (AAOCA) is a rare congenital disease that may cause sudden death in young subjects. Frequently the first and only presentation is with an acute event (such as myocardial infarction or sudden cardiac deaths) during physical effort. Not only symptoms are often absent, but also provocative tests fail to induce ischemia or related signs, showing in most patients negative results. For these limitations, the decision to undergo corrective surgery is based on the morphologic characteristics without the support of a functional evaluation. The study focused on developing a personalized ischemic risk assessment with the aid of fluid dynamic simulations. The simulation system integrate clinical data from different diagnostic sources and integrate them with coronary blood flow evaluation at rest and during simulated physical effort.


Clinical Trial Description

Anomalous Aortic Origin of Coronary Arteries (AAOCA) is a congenital condition where one or more coronary vessels originate from an ectopic site within the aorta, such as the opposite or wrong sinus of Valsalva. Its prevalence in the general population, has been estimated between 0.03% and 0.23% depending on the variant evaluated. The anomalous left or right coronary artery, besides its origin, may take 5 different general courses: interarterial, prepulmonic, subpulmonic, retroaortic or retrocardiac. Each of these forms may be subject to cause myocardial ischemia and subsequent sudden death during physical and sport activity. In most cases, the disease is silent and does not show any symptoms before the sudden cardiac death event (SCD). Only a few AAOCA subjects report symptoms before SCD that usually occurs unexpectedly after a moderate or intense physical activity. It is extremely hard to study the causing factors in a clinical environment due to the stochastic nature of the myocardial ischemic event and the inability to reproduce the exact effort conditions. Even when a complete assessment is performed, there is no clinical exam that can reproduce sustained exercise conditions responsible for triggering ischemia and SCD. Even if such an exam would exist and provide adequate results, the risk of SCD exceeds the benefits of having a correct diagnosis. To overcome all the current diagnostic limitations the ideal diagnostic test has to investigate coronary blood supply, myocardial oxygen demand in relation to the physical activity (intensity and duration) required for triggering an ischemic event, without putting the subjects at risk. To date the only possible way to reproduce such conditions is a subject-specific virtual simulation of aortic root and coronary artery integrated with coronary blood flow simulation able to mimic pressure, flow, and oxygen demand characteristics similar to those of intense exercise, in relation to changes that anomalous coronary undergoes under such conditions. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05159791
Study type Interventional
Source IRCCS Policlinico S. Donato
Contact Mauro Lo Rito, MD
Phone +39 0252774849
Email Mauro.lorito@grupposandonato.it
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date November 23, 2021
Completion date December 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT06032572 - Evaluation of the Safety and Effectiveness of the VRS100 System in PCI (ESSENCE) N/A
Recruiting NCT05846893 - Drug-Coated Balloon vs. Drug-Eluting Stent for Clinical Outcomes in Patients With Large Coronary Artery Disease N/A
Completed NCT04153006 - Comparison of Fingerstick Versus Venous Sample for Troponin I.
Completed NCT01205776 - EXCEL Clinical Trial N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04555174 - BIOFLOW-VIII All-comers Orsiro Mission Safety and Performance Registry
Recruiting NCT04582877 - Pressure Guidewire System Multi-center, Prospective, Self-Control, Clinical Trial N/A
Recruiting NCT04390672 - Multivessel TALENT N/A
Recruiting NCT03265535 - Validation of a Single Rest-Stress Imaging Protocol for Myocardial Perfusion Imaging
Not yet recruiting NCT04522583 - Increased CRP Concentrations in Patients Admitted to the Emergency Department With Troponin Elevation Aids to Rule Out Coronary Ischemia
Completed NCT02554006 - Predischarge Bundle to Minimize Negative Impact on Quality of Life of Nuisance Bleedings N/A
Terminated NCT02407626 - Optimization of Cardioprotection in Diabetic Patients Undergoing Cardiac Surgery N/A
Completed NCT02510547 - Comparison of a CrossBoss First Versus Standard Wire Escalation Strategy for Crossing Coronary Chronic Total Occlusion: the "CrossBoss First" Trial Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT02189499 - Feasibility Study of the Amaranth Medical FORTITUDE Bioresorbable Drug-Eluting Coronary Stent Phase 2
Completed NCT02197065 - Pilot Study of Atorvastatin for Orthopedic Surgery Patients Phase 2
Completed NCT02264717 - Dan-NICAD - Danish Study of Non-Invasive Diagnostic Testing in Coronary Artery Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT01681381 - Evaluate Safety And Effectiveness Of The Tivoli® DES and The Firebird2® DES For Treatment Coronary Revascularization N/A
Completed NCT01679886 - Comparison of Rubidium PET and SPECT With CZT Crystals for Detection of Myocardial Ischemia in Overweighed Patients and Women N/A
Completed NCT01655043 - Absolute Quantification of Coronary Flow Reserve by Stress Perfusion MRI Phase 2
Terminated NCT01892917 - BIOFLOW-III Hungary Satellite Registry N/A
Completed NCT01434043 - Diagnostic Accuracy of Cardiac CT Perfusion Compared to PET Imaging