Ventricular Dysfunction Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Phase I Randomized, Dose Escalation Study of the Safety and Efficacy of Intracoronary Delivery of Cardiosphere-Derived Stem Cells in Patients With Ischemic Left Ventricular Dysfunction and a Recent Myocardial Infarction
The purpose of this study is to determine whether giving cardiosphere-derived stem cells
(CDCs) to patients with decreased heart function and/or a large amount of damaged muscle
after a heart attack is safe. CDCs are cells grown from small biopsy samples taken from the
heart. Giving a patient their own CDCs is an investigational procedure that has been
approved by the Food and Drug Administration for this study. In addition to determining
whether this treatment is safe, the study will also examine whether it can decrease the
amount of heart muscle damage and/or improve heart function after a heart attack. The amount
of heart muscle damage and the function of the heart directly affects prognosis (the
predicted course of the disease), and the development of heart failure and other
complications some patients experience after a heart attack.
By way of background, scientists and physicians believed, until just a few years ago, that
heart muscle damaged after a heart attack could not be replaced. Recently, however,
scientists discovered that new heart muscle can form, or be regenerated, and that this
process can be enhanced (or increased) by the administration of large numbers of certain
cells isolated from the heart or bone marrow. These cells can be stem cells, or cells
derived from stem cells, and they may achieve their benefit by forming new heart muscle
cells, becoming heart muscle cells themselves, or releasing substances which increase the
ability of already existing stem cells to form new heart muscle. All of the studies
conducted so far have been experimental and no cell type is approved for routine clinical
care of patients with heart disease. However, studies involving bone marrow stem cells do
indicate some small improvement in heart function and one large study demonstrated a
decrease in clinical events in the group which received bone marrow cells.
Investigators of this study decided to study CDCs because they come from a person's own
body, and therefore have no foreign immune antigens which may be rejected. Since the cells
come from the person's heart, they are more likely to form heart tissue. In addition, animal
studies indicate no safety problems and that these cells are capable of forming heart muscle
and blood vessel cells after heart attacks. The investigators are now studying whether the
same is true in humans.
The type of study that is being proposed is called a prospective, randomized, dose
escalation study. This means that some of the patients will receive a solution which
contains the cells and some of the patients will receive conventional medical treatment. The
ratio is 2:1, which means that twice as many patients will receive cells as will receive
conventional medical treatment. The first 6 patients in each group will be randomized to
receive the study drug at a dose of 12.5 million cells or conventional medical treatment.
The remaining 18 patients will be randomized to receive study drug at a dose of 25 million
cells or conventional medical treatment. The DSMB will evaluate unblinded AE data (including
SAEs) when the first six patients have been enrolled and those receiving cells have been
discharged. There are two study sites. Each site will enroll 15 participants. The total
number of subjects will be 30, with an approximate 20% attrition rate.
Subjects will be referred to participate in the study by physicians caring for them. The
target number of participants is 24 patients who have an open artery to inject the stem
cells and whose biopsy tissues have been grown to 12.5 million cells. If for some reason the
cells cannot be expanded to 12.5 million or the subject's artery is not open enough to allow
proper injection, the subject will be replaced in the study population of 24 patients but
continue to be followed. This means that the subject will undergo all tests, procedures
(except cell infusion) and follow-up visits that would have otherwise been required for
participation in the study.
When a subject is determined to be eligible for the study, the protocol will be reviewed
with the subject and informed consent will be obtained by a physician participating in the
study prior to any testing or treatment.
This study is being conducted at the Cedars-Sinai Medial Center and The Johns Hopkins
Hospital. The total length of a subject's participation in the study will be approximately
14 months, from enrollment to 12 month follow-up visit.
SCREENING PHASE - Participants will undergo a screening evaluation. A physical examination
with medical history will be performed which includes medication review as well as alcohol
or drug use. A blood specimen will be obtained, approximately three teaspoons, to assess for
blood counts, chemistry, HIV, hepatitis and pregnancy test for females of childbearing age.
An MRI scan will be performed to determine whether the portion of the heart from which the
biopsy would be obtained was damaged from the heart attack. MRI will also detect if any
cardiac tumors are present. An electrocardiogram will be performed to assess your heart's
electrical activity. Additionally, a computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest, abdomen and
pelvis will be performed to detect any existing cancer or tumors. If any of the tests are
positive, the subject will not be able to participate in the study.
RANDOMIZATION - After the screening visit is completed, subjects will be randomized to
either cell infusion or conventional medical therapy. Randomization is 2:1, meaning that
twice as many subjects will be randomized to receive cell infusion as conventional medical
therapy. Conventional medical therapy after a heart attack can include beta blockers,
aspirin, diuretics, cholesterol lowering agents, anticoagulants, ACE inhibitors or calcium
channel blockers and enrollment in a cardiac rehabilitation program. Depending on the degree
of heart damage and it's affects on the patient's heart rhythm, the patient may be eligible
for pacemaker or implantable cardioverter-defibrillator. The specific medical management is
determined by the patient's primary care physician or cardiologist.
BASELINE VISIT- At this visit several tests will be performed to assess the heart's baseline
function, i.e., the function before cells are infused. It will be conducted prior to the
biopsy. These include completion of a questionnaire about how much activity the subject can
perform; blood studies to measure blood count and the function of the liver and kidneys; an
electrocardiogram which measures the electrical activity of the heart; an exercise test
which will also measure blood pressure, heart rate, electrocardiogram, and the amount of
oxygen and carbon dioxide in the exhaled air; a test which measures how much distance the
subject can walk in six minutes; a test of lung function; a recording of the heart's rhythm
over 48 hours; and an MRI to provide information about the baseline function and recovery of
the heart since the myocardial infarction.
BIOPSY PHASE - For subjects randomized to receive stem cells, a biopsy of the heart will be
performed in the catheterization laboratory. In this test, a small amount of tissue is
removed from the internal lining of the heart. A long, flexible tube (catheter), called a
bioptome, is inserted into a vein and threaded into the right side of the heart. Most often
the catheter is threaded through the jugular vein of the neck under local anesthesia. The
tip of the catheter is fitted with tiny jaws that allow the doctor to take very small snips
of muscle for microscopic examination. The doctor will take 5-10 small pieces of heart
tissue from the right side of the wall that separates the right side of the heart from the
left side of the heart. This will be used to grow the cells over a four week period. Blood
pressure and vital signs status will be monitored during and for several hours following the
procedure. An electrocardiogram; blood (approximately 15 cc or 3 teaspoons) will be obtained
to measure your blood count, kidney and liver function; and urine specimen for urinalysis
will be collected. An echocardiogram will be performed before the patient leaves the
hospital to determine whether the instrument obtaining the biopsy caused a hole in the wall
from which the biopsy was obtained.
INTRACORONARY INFUSION PHASE - During this phase, subjects randomized to receive cells will
be brought to the cardiac catheterization laboratory to undergo a cardiac catheterization
procedure similar to the angioplasty performed to treat the heart attack. However, rather
than having an angioplasty, the cells will be injected into the coronary artery whose
blockage was responsible for the heart attack. The cells will be infused through a balloon
catheter inflated at the previously implanted stent. There will be no new stent implanted
unless it is felt clinically necessary. Following the procedure, the subject will remain in
the hospital for 24 hours at which time laboratory studies, including cardiac enzymes to
rule out cardiac injury, or a heart attack, as well as ECG monitoring will be performed. The
subject will be released from the hospital and asked to wear an ECG recording device for 48
hours.
FOLLOW UP VISITS - For all subjects enrolled in the study, there will be six follow-up
visits. This is necessary to obtain and compare information from both sets of study
participants. Additionally, it is necessary to obtain the information to determine the
safety of the cell infusion and whether it has decreased the amount of the heart which is
damaged, improved the blood flow and function of the heart and the portion of the heart
which received the cells.
A history and physical will be performed at all of the 6 visits, asking the subject about
any side effects they may have had and what other medicines they are taking. Additionally,
study staff will perform an electrocardiogram, obtain blood and urine studies measuring
blood counts and kidney and liver function, and obtain a 48-hour recording of the subject's
electrocardiogram. During the six and twelve month visits, a cardiac MRI scan will also be
performed to measure the amount of the heart which is damaged and the blood flow and
function of the heart and to assess the portion of the heart which received the cells. It
will also determine whether any tumors have formed in the heart. At these visits, there will
also be a test of lung function, a six-minute walk test, and questions about how much
activity the subject can perform. Additionally, there will be an exercise test which will
include measuring heart rate, blood pressure, electrocardiogram, and amount of oxygen and
carbon dioxide in exhaled air. Patients who receive an implantable cardio-defibrillator
during the study will have a cardiac CT instead of MRI.
The patient will be followed in the study for a total of 12 months from the baseline visit
and any unexpected effects of the study will be reported to the hospital's institutional
review board, the study data safety monitoring board and the FDA, as appropriate, depending
on the severity of the adverse event.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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