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Treatment of Slow-flow After Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention With Flow-mediated Hyperemia

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Coronary Microvascular Disease
Myocardial Infarction
Interventions
Drug: Drug-mediated hyperemia
Other: Flow-mediated hyperemia
Registration Number
NCT04685941
Lead Sponsor
Fundación EPIC
Brief Summary

A total of 100 patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) presenting slow-flow after primary-percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI) will be randomized to pharmacologic treatment with hyperemic drugs versus flow-mediated hyperemia.

Detailed Description

Slow-flow phenomena is observed around 15% of patients undergoing PPCI and has been associated with poor prognosis. Hyperemic drugs, such as nitroprussiate and adenosine, have not yet demonstrated to reduce the infarct size and prognosis in patients with slow flow. Controlled flow-mediated hyperemia using a dedicated catheter for intracoronary saline infusion has been shown to stimulate microcirculatory vasodilatation in stable patients similarly as hyperemic drugs.

The aims of the study are to compare the absolute microcirculatory resistance of the infarct-related artery presenting with slow flow after PPCI, as assessed by intracoronary thermo-dilution, treated with standard pharmacologic hyperemia versus flow-mediated hyperemia; and to compare the angiographic TIMI frame count after treatment of slow flow phenomena with the two investigated strategies.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
67
Inclusion Criteria
  1. ST elevation myocardial infarction Killip I <12 hours since symptoms onset.
  2. ST elevation > 2 mm anterior leads or > 1 mm inferior or lateral leads.
  3. Sustained slow coronary flow (TIMI flow 0-2) for at least 30 seconds after stent implantation or stent post-dilatation.
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Previous myocardial infarction in the culprit artery
  2. Previous stroke
  3. Advanced kidney disease (creatinine clearance <30 ml / min).
  4. Active bleeding
  5. Allergy to contrast, nitroprussiate or adenosine.
  6. Culprit lesion in coronary bypass, left main coronary artery or stent thrombosis
  7. Macroscopic thrombus embolization in the infarct-related artery

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Drug-mediated hyperemiaDrug-mediated hyperemiaPatients presenting with slow flow after PPCI undergo to at least 200 mcg of intracoronary nitroprussiate or 500 mcg of intracoronary adenosine during 2 minutes
Flow-mediated hyperemiaFlow-mediated hyperemiaPatients presenting with slow flow after PPCI undergo to controlled saline intracoronary infusion by a dedicated microcatheter (RayFlow) at 20 ml/min during 2 minutes
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Angiographic TIMI frame count2 minutes

Cine-fluoroscopic recording of the infarct-related artery (IRA) at 30 frames/second and off-line core-laboratory assessment of the number of cineframes needed for dye to reach standardized distal landmarks is the coprimary endpoint. Long TIMI frame counts are indicative of slow coronary flow. Previous studies showed TIMI frame counts of 30 (SD 12) after nitroprussiate in slow flow STEMI patients. The present study is powered to assess 25 percent difference between study groups (80 percent power and 5 percent alfa error).

Minimal microcirculatory resistance (MMR)2 minutes

MMR is assessed by intracoronary thermodilution with a dedicated pressure wire and microcatheter (RayFlow, Hexacath) during saline infusion at 20 ml/min. MMR is measured offline by the core-laboratory at 20 seconds of the saline infusion in the standard medical treatment group and at 2 minutes and 20 seconds in the experimental group. According to previous studies, MMR was 537 Wood units (SD 289). The present study is powered to assess 30 percent difference between study groups after study intervention (80 percent power and 5 percent alfa error).

Comparison of the Absolute coronary flow between the study groups.2 minutes

Absolute coronary flow is performed simultaneously with the MMR. This value shows the coronary blood flow of the culprit artery during maximal hyperemia.

Comparison of the MMR in the experimental group during the two-minutes saline infusion2 minutes

Experimental treatment with saline infusion via microcatheter is performed continuously recording the pressure and temperature values of the culprit artery. Off-line core-laboratory assessment of the MMR will be performed at 20 seconds and at 2 minutes of the saline infusion.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (5)

Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge

🇪🇸

Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain

Hospital Universitario Puerta del Mar

🇪🇸

Cadiz, Spain

Hospital del Mar

🇪🇸

Barcelona, Spain

Hospital La Princesa

🇪🇸

Madrid, Spain

Hospital Clínic de Barcelona

🇪🇸

Barcelona, Spain

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