Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04141800
Other study ID # ESR-17-13244
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date April 30, 2019
Est. completion date March 31, 2021

Study information

Verified date March 2021
Source Spanish Society of Cardiology
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational [Patient Registry]

Clinical Trial Summary

- Participant centres and researchers: 20 National Public Health System hospitals. Cardiology specialist physicians - Clinical Research Ethics Committee (CREC): Hospital 12 de Octubre, Madrid - Main goal: To estimate prevalence and, in medium term basis (12 months), incidence of hyperkalaemia in heart failure (HF) outpatients with reduced ejection fraction (REF) and its relationship with non-optimal HF therapy and clinical outcomes (mortality and hospital admission). - Study design: National multicentric prospective observational study that includes 12 months follow-up of consecutive cases of HF outpatients with REF. Inclusion baseline visit and follow -up visits at 12 months will be scheduled for collecting clinical and blood sample data of patients. - Study population: The expected number of patients recruited in 20 Spanish research centres is 600.


Description:

PARTICIPANT CENTRES AND RESEARCHERS: 20 National Public Health System hospitals. Cardiology specialist physicians MAIN GOAL: To estimate prevalence and, in medium term basis (12 months), incidence of hyperkalaemia in heart failure (HF) outpatients with reduced ejection fraction (REF) and its relationship with non-optimal HF therapy and clinical outcomes (mortality and hospital admission). SPECIFIC GOALS: 1. -Estimating Hyperkalaemia prevalence in these patients. 2. -Assessing the role of hyperkalaemia with the use of non-optimal therapy doses. 3. -Estimating 12 months hyperkalaemia incidence on these patients and describing the severity of the episodes. 4. -Estimating incidence of HF hospital admission and/or death in these patients on a medium term basis (12 months) and its association with existence of hyperkalaemia during follow up. 5. -Assessing hyperkalaemia risk during follow-up in relation with the existence of diabetes and/or renal failure (RF) at baseline visit. STUDY DESIGN National multicentric prospective observational study that includes 12 months follow-up of consecutive cases of HF outpatients with REF. Inclusion baseline visit and follow -up visit at 12 months will be scheduled for collecting clinical and blood sample data of patients. The study will be performed in ordinary conditions of clinical practice; no additional procedures or interventions will be performed. Patients will be selected in cardiology outpatient clinics of 20 Spanish centres, including the first 30 patients meeting inclusion and exclusion criteria. All patients will undergo the common studies according to usual clinical practice and at least both, potassium and renal creatinine clearance values will be collected. To respond to the main objective, prevalence of hyperkalaemia at baseline will be determined as well as the appearance of new hyperkalaemia cases in the follow up of patients that had normal potassium levels at baseline visit; their relationship with outcomes of interest will also be determined STUDY POPULATION: The expected number of patients recruited in 20 Spanish research centres is 600. CONSIDERATIONS ABOUT SIMPLE SIZE: Assuming a 10% risk of outcomes (mortality or HF hospital admission) among the exposed (hyperkalaemia), 2.5% among the non-exposed and a 7:1 non-exposed/exposed ratio, 73 exposed and 511 non-exposed patients should be included to have a 80% power to detect these differences with a 95% confidence level. The recruitment goal is set at 600 patients. This sample size allows a precision of ±2,4%, assuming a prevalence of hyperkalaemia at baseline of 10% and with a 95% confidence level. Furthermore, assuming 5% hyperkalaemia cumulative incidence through follow-up among hyperkalaemia-free patients at baseline, the proposed sample size, allows a precision of±1,8% with a 95% confidence level. SELECTION OF CENTRES The number of participant centres throughout Spain will be 20 and a cardiologist will be the principal investigator at every centre. The centres have been selected either among those with excellence-certified HF units, included in CiberCV Consortium or with good performance in previous similar registries; this selection is not random, but based on interest and high performance criteria in the field of HF VARIABLES AND CRF: The main outcome variables are: 1. - Hyperkalaemia. Serum Potassium (K+) will be measured in baseline and follow-up visits, but also if there is any intermediate hospital admission. All available potassium measurements during follow-up will be reviewed and values of hyperkalaemia identified. Hyperkalaemia will be considered with (K+) Values > 5,4 mEq/L 2. - Proportion of patients using drugs with proven efficacy for HF with REF -but also linked with hyperkalaemia- (ACEIs/ARB-II/ARNI and MRAs) and proportion of patients with use of optimal doses (based on current ESC heart failure guidelines2) of the same drugs; reason for not using them (or not receiving optimal doses) will be registered. Proportion of patients in the following categories will also be computed: - No ACEi/ARB/ARNI or at less than target dose and no MRA - ACEi/ARB/ARNI at target dose and no MRA - ACEi/ARB/ARNI at target dose and MRA at less than target dose - ACEi/ARB/ARNI at target dose and MRA at target dose 3. - Hospital admissions during follow-up and main cause for them. Outcomes considered will include HF admissions caused by hyperkalaemia and related events. Outcome Serum (K+) values will be also registered. 4. - Mortality and cause. HF (and hyperkalaemia) hospital admissions and mortality will be independently considered as outcomes; joint outcome incidence of both will be also calculated. STUDY DEVELOPMENT: Every participating centre will include from inclusion date the first 30 heart failure outpatients who fulfil the inclusion criteria and none of the exclusion ones. The excluded patients will be also registered, pointing out the reason of exclusion. A follow-up and final visit will be scheduled after 12 months for collecting all the variables the study requires. Hospitalisation data since inclusion visit will be also collected, together with the information of blood sample test performed in such period for detecting hyperkalaemia episodes. Mortality data will include date and cause, where possible. If follow-up visit cannot be conducted, the reason for it will be registered. The envisaged length of the study is 24 months since approval date. DATA COLLECTION: Consecutively, every researcher will handle and explain the information sheet to the patients that might fulfil de inclusion criteria (and do not present any exclusion criteria) and will ask them to sign the informed consent. Researchers must warrant the accuracy and completion of the data collected for the study. Data registered at CRF should be consistent with source documents used for their collection. DATA MANAGEMENT: Data will be collected during initial and follow-up visits and they will be integrated into a unique data base of the web platform. Researchers are responsible of the information included in the database and will access by means of personal login and password. The online platform will include ranges and rules to minimize errors in data registering. PLAN FOR DATA ANALYSIS Hyperkalaemia prevalence at basal visit and the rate of patients who do not receive and/or reach optimal doses of drugs of interest (ACIEs, ARB-II, MRAs) will be estimated and their corresponding 95% confidence intervals computed. The reason for not receiving and/or reaching optimal doses of drugs will be described, especially if it is due to hyperkalaemia. For those patients who do not present hyperkalaemia at baseline, 12 month hyperkalaemia cumulative incidence (95% confidence interval) will be estimated; also it will be estimated the proportion of patients who have to modify their therapy due to hyperkalaemia. The number of episodes of hyperkalaemia during follow-up in relation to the number of patients will be estimated and their severity and the therapy changes that induced described. Also 12 months cumulative incidence of clinical outcomes will be estimated: hospitalisation due to HF or to, hyperkalaemia (and related events) and mortality, considered as individual and composite outcomes. The association between hyperkalaemia and occurrence of outcomes will be analyses and also adjusted using potential confounding factors by means of logistic regression models The quantitative variables will be generally described using either the mean and the standard deviation or the median and interquartile range according them following or not a normal distribution. When comparing groups, t-student test will be used for continuous variables and chi-share test for qualitative ones. Both, intermediate and final analysis, are planned to be carried out after baseline-visit closure and at the end of follow up (12 months).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 565
Est. completion date March 31, 2021
Est. primary completion date March 31, 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: 1. Patients, women or men, aged 18 or more 2. Documented HF with REF (<40%) diagnosis 3. Signed written informed consent Exclusion Criteria: 1. Any type of disorder affecting the capacity to give free and informed written consent 2. Clinical trial enrolment at the moment of the inclusion 3. Patients suffering stage 5 chronic kidney disease 4. Patients with less than a year life span due to diseases different from HF 5. Not having completed HF drug titration stage at the moment of inclusion (this stage is not completed if, on doctor's judgement, possible maximum doses have not been reached in RAA system drugs and any of these drugs has been included or dose-modified in recruitment visit) 6. Informed consent refusal At any time during follow-up patients can leave the study (and will be censored in the analysis) or retire their consent (and will be excluded from the analysis).

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Locations

Country Name City State
Spain Complejo Hospitalario Universitario de A Coruña (CHUAC) A Coruña

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Spanish Society of Cardiology AstraZeneca

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Spain, 

References & Publications (9)

Acker CG, Johnson JP, Palevsky PM, Greenberg A. Hyperkalemia in hospitalized patients: causes, adequacy of treatment, and results of an attempt to improve physician compliance with published therapy guidelines. Arch Intern Med. 1998 Apr 27;158(8):917-24. — View Citation

Bandak G, Sang Y, Gasparini A, Chang AR, Ballew SH, Evans M, Arnlov J, Lund LH, Inker LA, Coresh J, Carrero JJ, Grams ME. Hyperkalemia After Initiating Renin-Angiotensin System Blockade: The Stockholm Creatinine Measurements (SCREAM) Project. J Am Heart Assoc. 2017 Jul 19;6(7). pii: e005428. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.116.005428. — View Citation

Crespo-Leiro MG, Segovia-Cubero J, González-Costello J, Bayes-Genis A, López-Fernández S, Roig E, Sanz-Julve M, Fernández-Vivancos C, de Mora-Martín M, García-Pinilla JM, Varela-Román A, Almenar-Bonet L, Lara-Padrón A, de la Fuente-Galán L, Delgado-Jiménez J; project research team. Adherence to the ESC Heart Failure Treatment Guidelines in Spain: ESC Heart Failure Long-term Registry. Rev Esp Cardiol (Engl Ed). 2015 Sep;68(9):785-93. doi: 10.1016/j.rec.2015.03.008. Epub 2015 May 21. — View Citation

Jain N, Kotla S, Little BB, Weideman RA, Brilakis ES, Reilly RF, Banerjee S. Predictors of hyperkalemia and death in patients with cardiac and renal disease. Am J Cardiol. 2012 May 15;109(10):1510-3. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2012.01.367. Epub 2012 Feb 18. — View Citation

Núñez J, Bayés-Genís A, Zannad F, Rossignol P, Núñez E, Bodí V, Miñana G, Santas E, Chorro FJ, Mollar A, Carratalá A, Navarro J, Górriz JL, Lupón J, Husser O, Metra M, Sanchis J. Long-Term Potassium Monitoring and Dynamics in Heart Failure and Risk of Mortality. Circulation. 2018 Mar 27;137(13):1320-1330. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.117.030576. Epub 2017 Oct 12. — View Citation

Ponikowski P, Voors AA, Anker SD, Bueno H, Cleland JG, Coats AJ, Falk V, González-Juanatey JR, Harjola VP, Jankowska EA, Jessup M, Linde C, Nihoyannopoulos P, Parissis JT, Pieske B, Riley JP, Rosano GM, Ruilope LM, Ruschitzka F, Rutten FH, van der Meer P; Authors/Task Force Members; Document Reviewers. 2016 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure: The Task Force for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC). Developed with the special contribution of the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the ESC. Eur J Heart Fail. 2016 Aug;18(8):891-975. doi: 10.1002/ejhf.592. Epub 2016 May 20. — View Citation

Sarwar CM, Papadimitriou L, Pitt B, Piña I, Zannad F, Anker SD, Gheorghiade M, Butler J. Hyperkalemia in Heart Failure. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2016 Oct 4;68(14):1575-89. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2016.06.060. Review. — View Citation

Sayago-Silva I, García-López F, Segovia-Cubero J. Epidemiology of heart failure in Spain over the last 20 years. Rev Esp Cardiol (Engl Ed). 2013 Aug;66(8):649-56. doi: 10.1016/j.rec.2013.03.012. Epub 2013 Jul 5. Review. — View Citation

WRITING COMMITTEE MEMBERS, Yancy CW, Jessup M, Bozkurt B, Butler J, Casey DE Jr, Drazner MH, Fonarow GC, Geraci SA, Horwich T, Januzzi JL, Johnson MR, Kasper EK, Levy WC, Masoudi FA, McBride PE, McMurray JJ, Mitchell JE, Peterson PN, Riegel B, Sam F, Stevenson LW, Tang WH, Tsai EJ, Wilkoff BL; American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. 2013 ACCF/AHA guideline for the management of heart failure: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on practice guidelines. Circulation. 2013 Oct 15;128(16):e240-327. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0b013e31829e8776. Epub 2013 Jun 5. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary One-year incidence of hyperkalemia New onset of serum K+ >5,4 mEq/L 12 months
Secondary Non-optimal heart failure therapy Proportion of patients using drugs with proven efficacy for HF with REF -but also linked with hyperkalaemia- (ACEIs/ARB-II/ARNI and MRAs)
Proportion of patients with use of optimal doses (based on current ESC heart failure guidelines2) of the same drugs
Proportion of patients that do not receive ACEi/ARB/ARNI (or at less than target dose) AND do not receive MRA either.
Proportion of patients that receive ACEi/ARB/ARNI at target dose AND do not receive MRA.
Proportion of patients that receive ACEi/ARB/ARNI at target dose AND receive MRA at less than target dose.
Proportion of patients that receive ACEi/ARB/ARNI at target dose AND also receive MRA at target dose.
12 months
Secondary One-year incidence of heart failure hospital admission One-year incidence of heart failure hospital admission 12 months
Secondary One-year incidence of mortality Total mortality 12 months
Secondary One-year incidence of heart failure hospital admission and/or mortality One-year incidence of heart failure hospital admission and/or mortality 12 months
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05077293 - Building Electronic Tools To Enhance and Reinforce Cardiovascular Recommendations - Heart Failure
Completed NCT03614169 - Direct HIS-pacing as an Alternative to BiV-pacing in Symptomatic HFrEF Patients With True LBBB N/A
Recruiting NCT05278962 - HF Patients With LVADs Being Treated With SGLT2i Phase 4
Completed NCT04210375 - Study of JK07 in Subjects With Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction (HFrEF) Phase 1
Not yet recruiting NCT06433687 - Evaluation of the HekaHeart Platform in Medication Management for Heart Failure Patients
Completed NCT05001165 - Dashboard Activated Services and Tele-Health for Heart Failure N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03701880 - Early Use of Ivabradine in Heart Failure N/A
Recruiting NCT05650658 - Left vs Left Randomized Clinical Trial N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06299436 - Hemodynamic Assessment of underLying myocyTe Function in Right Heart Failure
Recruiting NCT05992116 - Iron Deficiency in Patients With Heart Failure and Reduced and Mildly Reduced Ejection Fraction
Recruiting NCT05365568 - Left Bundle Branch Area Pacing for Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy: A Randomized Study N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05204238 - Follow Up of acuTe Heart failUre: a pRospective Echocardiographic and Clinical Study (FUTURE)
Not yet recruiting NCT04420065 - Effects of Preferential Left Ventricular Pacing on Ventriculoarterial Coupling and Clinical Course of Heart Failure N/A
Terminated NCT03479424 - Home Outpatient Monitoring and Engagement to Predict HF Exacerbation
Completed NCT02113033 - VAgal Nerve Stimulation: safeGUARDing Heart Failure Patients Phase 2
Recruiting NCT03209180 - Immediate Release Versus Slow Release Carvedilol in Heart Failure Phase 4
Recruiting NCT05299879 - Screening for Advanced Heart Failure IN Stable ouTpatientS - The SAINTS Study
Recruiting NCT05637853 - Telemonitored Fast Track Medical Sequencing for Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction
Completed NCT03870074 - CPET Predicts Long-term Survival and Positive Response to CRT
Recruiting NCT04590001 - Effect of the MobiusHD® in Patients With Heart Failure N/A