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Stent Thrombosis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04734028 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

PTRG-DES Consortium

PTRG
Start date: July 9, 2003
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The PTRG-DES consortium is a coalition composed of multi-center, real-world registries including CAD patients treated with DES in South Korea. From 9 academic registries in Korea, a total of 13,160 patients were enrolled for this database between July 2003 and August 2018. The aim of the study was to investigate long-term prognostic implications of platelet function and genotypes after DES implantation for significant CAD in South Korea.

NCT ID: NCT04702113 Completed - Clinical trials for Myocardial Infarction

Evaluating Pharmacogenomic Variants for Cardiology Therapeutics

CARES2
Start date: December 3, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cipherome's Lighthouse is a clinical decision support tool that incorporates a patient's pharmacogenetic information to determine therapeutic strategy, including determining appropriate dosage or assessing the likelihood of toxicity of a therapeutic regimen.

NCT ID: NCT04580602 Completed - Clinical trials for Myocardial Infarction

Association Between Genetic Variant Scores and P2Y12 Inhibitor Effects

CARES1
Start date: October 7, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this study is to predict and prevent adverse drug events by investigating the impact of genetic variants, demographics, and environmental factors in subjects status post myocardial infarction and percutaneous coronary insertion who have experienced adverse drug events while on P2Y12 inhibitors.

NCT ID: NCT04011046 Completed - Stent Thrombosis Clinical Trials

Register of Patients Benefiting From a Coronary Bifurcation Angioplasty at the University Hospital of Nîmes and Montpellier in 2017

Register
Start date: January 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Cardiovascular diseases are the second leading cause of death in France and the world's leading cause.Coronary bifurcations are conducive to the development of atheromatous lesions due to flow turbulence generating a pro-atherogenic effect. They represent about 15% of coronary lesions and 30% of lesions in pluri truncular patients.Coronary bifurcation angioplasty is a complex angioplasty with a high risk of complications.Numerous studies have compared different angioplasty techniques with 2 stents in bifurcation lesions. However, two studies of The Nordic-Baltic Bifurcation Study did not show at 6 months or 5 years of age any significant difference in major cardiovascular events (death, heart attack, stent thrombosis, emergency revascularization of the target vessel) in patients with a one-stent strategy compared to the systematic use of two stents. There are also several post-expansion techniques and the one that appears to be the most commonly used today (known as the "KISSING-BALLOON") consists of inflating two balloons at the same time, one in the main branch and the other in the daughter branch in order to open the meshes of the stent towards the daughter branch. Studies on a test bench to evaluate the deformation of a stent in different coronary anatomies according to the material and technique used have nevertheless revealed several limitations to this technique, in particular an elliptical deformation of the stent linked to the inflation of 2 simultaneous balloons. From this work, a new technique known as "POT SIDE POT" was born, consisting in post dilating the proximal part of the stent of the main branch in order to place it as closely as possible against the wall, then open the stent meshes towards the lateral branch by balloon dilation followed by a new post dilation of the proximal part of the mother branch stent to avoid the use of 2 simultaneous balloons and thus reduce stent deformation by maintaining a circular geometry while allowing proper stent attachment. However, to date, there are no clinical studies comparing the POT SIDE POT technique with that of KISSING-BALLOON in coronary bifurcation angioplasty. This is why we would like to compare these two post-dilation techniques by a retrospective study on the occurrence of major cardiovascular events and stent thrombosis in patients who received a coronary bifurcation angioplasty in 2017 at the University Hospital of Nîmes.

NCT ID: NCT03862352 Completed - Stent Thrombosis Clinical Trials

Glasgow Natural History Study Of Covered Coronary Interventions

GNOCCI
Start date: January 1, 2000
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Covered stents (CS) are a potentially lifesaving treatment for grade III coronary perforation but delivery can be challenging, and the long-term durability and safety including risk of acute stent thrombosis are unknown. The GNOCCI study aims to evaluate long term outcomes after coronary perforation including patients treated with covered stents.

NCT ID: NCT03544294 Completed - Stent Thrombosis Clinical Trials

veRy Thin Stents for Patients With Left mAIn or bifurcatioN in Real Life: the RAIN a Multicenter Study

RAIN
Start date: June 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

For permanent coronary stents, reduction of thickness of struts have become one of the most important innovation, being related to easier manipulation, reduced risk of stent thrombosis and low rate of revascularization. Consequently the investigators performed a multicenter registry enrolling all consecutive patients treated with very thin stents for ULM or bifurcation.

NCT ID: NCT03491891 Completed - Stent Thrombosis Clinical Trials

Factors Contribute to Very Late Stent Thrombosis After New Generation DES Implantation in China

Start date: January 1, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The investigators sought to identify and verify the potential correlates and mechanisms of Very Late Stent Thrombosis (VLST) after the implantation of new generation drug eluting steng in China from an analysis of multicenter registries.

NCT ID: NCT03312296 Completed - Stent Thrombosis Clinical Trials

Definite Stent Thrombosis in Comatose Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest Survivors

ST OHCA
Start date: August 1, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Reliable data on stent thrombosis (ST) in comatose out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) survivors is lacking. In comatose OHCA survivors suspicion of ST can be made with precise clinical monitoring of the patient with definite confirmation being possible only by coronary angiography or autopsy of deceased patients. However in addition to definite ST which can be confirmed using current protocols, additional ST which are clinically silent are plausible. These could be identified only by systematic coronary angiography of all OHCA survivors or by autopsy of deceased patients. Collectively with definite ST confirmed by coronary angiography upon clinical suspicion the incidence of all forms of ST in survivors of OHCA treated with PCI and hypothermia could be obtained. Consecutive comatose survivors of OHCA treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and hypothermia will be included. All study participants will receive treatment per our established clinical protocol and will be followed for 10 days. In all patients in whom clinical suspicion of ST will be made immediate coronary angiography and if necessary PCI will be carried out. In all patients that will die in the observed period of 10 days autopsy will be performed. Survivors however will have an additional control coronary angiography on 10th day after admission, to assess presence of clinically silent ST. We expect that the incidence of true definitive ST in comatose OHCA survivors treated with urgent PCI with stenting and hypothermia is greater than one, which is confirmed on the basis of clinical suspicion by angiography or later with autopsy.

NCT ID: NCT03209843 Completed - Clinical trials for Ischemic Cardiomyopathy

Post-stenting Assessment of Reendothelialization With OFDI After CTO Procedure (PERFECTO)

PERFECTO
Start date: March 7, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of PERFECTO is to assess the reendothelialization at 3 months after successfully CTO percutaneous intervention (PCI) with new generation drug eluting stent (DES) by OFDI analysis. Designed as a multicentric, observational and prospective study which will be conducted at University Hospital of Poitiers (France), a systematic OFDI analysis will be realized immediately after CTO-PCI and at 3 months. Known as major predictive factors of stent thrombosis, percentages of malapposition, uncovered struts and neointimal hyperplasia proliferation will be measured over the entire length of each stent implanted combining in a composite primary endpoint.

NCT ID: NCT03118895 Completed - Clinical trials for Myocardial Infarction

Leaders Free III: BioFreedom™ Clinical Trial

Start date: November 8, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A study evaluating the safety and efficacy of the BioFreedom™ Biolimus A9™ coated Cobalt Chromium coronary stent system in patients at high risk of bleeding