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Clinical Trials/NCT04031573
NCT04031573
Active, Not Recruiting
Phase 3

A Multicenter, Prospective, Randomized, Placebo-controlled, Double-blind, Multi-arm, Multi-stage Clinical Trial of Ivabradine for Heart Rate Control In Septic Shock

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris1 site in 1 country429 target enrollmentFebruary 26, 2021

Overview

Phase
Phase 3
Intervention
Ivabradine
Conditions
Septic Shock
Sponsor
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Enrollment
429
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Percentage of patients with heart rate within the predefined threshold (80-94 bpm) at hour-48
Status
Active, Not Recruiting
Last Updated
last month

Overview

Brief Summary

Septic shock is a major health problem, with several million cases annually worldwide and a mortality approaching 45%. Tachycardia is associated with excess mortality during septic shock. This pejorative effect could be related to the increase in cardiac metabolic demand, impaired cardiac diastolic function, and/or poorer tolerance of administered exogenous catecholamines. Recent studies suggest that controlling the heart rate with the use of beta blockers has beneficial effects on the morbidity and mortality of septic shock. However, the negative effects of beta-blockers on cardiac contractility and blood pressure complicate their use during septic shock, particularly because about one-half of patients exhibit a septic-associated systolic dysfunction, which often requires the use of inotropes.

Ivabradine is a selective inhibitor of If channels in the sinoatrial node. It is a pure bradycardic agent with no deleterious effect on other aspects of cardiac function (contractility, conduction and repolarization) nor on blood pressure. Ivabradine can therefore alleviate sinus tachycardia without negative inotropic effects nor hypotension. Moreover, the improvement in diastolic function (ventricular filling) with ivabradine may increase stroke volume, even in case of severe impairment of systolic function. Controlling sinus tachycardia with ivabradine during septic shock would allow reducing cardiac metabolic demand (and potentially associated ischemic events) and improving the chronotropic tolerance of exogenous catecholamines. The effectiveness of ivabradine in controlling the heart rate was demonstrated in various clinical settings such as coronary artery disease, chronic heart failure and cardiogenic shock. Encouraging preliminary data are reported in critically ill patients.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
February 26, 2021
End Date
April 22, 2026
Last Updated
last month
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • 18 years of age or older,
  • Proven or suspected site of infection,
  • Septic shock (defined as hypotension unresponsive to fluid resuscitation and requiring vasopressor treatment to maintain adequate blood pressure in the context of proven or suspected site of infection) for at least 2 hours and less than 24 hours (inclusion is possible before 2 hours in case of increasing doses of norepinephrine),
  • In sinus rhythm with heart rate ≥ 95 bpm at time of randomization,
  • Informed consent obtained in accordance with local regulations,
  • Affiliation to a social security regime.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Age \< 18 years,
  • Cardiac arythmia, conduction disorder, sinus syndrome ("sick sinus syndrome"), sino-atrial block; 3rd degree atrioventricular block, "IRISS" protocol, version 6.0 of 30/10/2023 7/47 This document is the property of DRCD / APHP. All reproduction is strictly prohibited.
  • Cardiogenic shock or unstable or acute heart failure without proven or suspected infection,
  • Acute myocardial infarction with angiographic documentation; CCS class
  • ≥ II angina pectoris;
  • Septic shock requiring vasopressor treatment for more than 24 hours,
  • Refractory shock with systolic arterial pressure \<90 mm Hg) despite the use of high doses of vasopressors (norepinephrine BASE or epinephrine BASE \> 2.4 µg/kg/min; these doses should be multiplied by two for noradrenaline salt (tartrate or bitartrate),
  • Co-treatment with drugs inducing bradycardia, QT lengthening or strong inhibition of CYP4503A4, pacemaker, defibrillator, kalemia \<3 mM,
  • Co-treatment with verapamil or diltiazem (which are moderate CYP4503A4 inhibitors with heart rate reducing properties)
  • Known pregnancy, breast feeding, women with childbearing potential will be tested for pregnancy and excluded if pregnant,

Arms & Interventions

Ivabradine (Low)

Intervention: Ivabradine

Ivabradine (High)

Intervention: Ivabradine

Control

Intervention: Placebo

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Percentage of patients with heart rate within the predefined threshold (80-94 bpm) at hour-48

Time Frame: hour 48 after treatment

for activity and treatment selection at interim analysis

Percentage of patients dead at 28 days

Time Frame: 28 days

for efficacy and the final analysis

Secondary Outcomes

  • percentage of patients with bradycardia (heart rate <60/min), atrial fibrillation, phosphenes or blurred vision up to day-17(Day 17)
  • Percentage of patients with a heart rate within the target range (80-94 bpm) at hour-72(hour-72)
  • Organ failures free days (SOFA<3 for each organ) at day-14 and day-28,(at day-14 and day-28)
  • Left ventricle ejection fraction(at randomization (hour-0) , 12 hours, and 24 hours after the first administration of study drug)
  • cardiac troponin assessment(a blood sample will be collected at randomization, day-2 and day-3)
  • lactate clearance(at day-2 and day-3;)
  • Pharmacokinetics of ivabradine(Day-3)
  • Number of catecholamines-, vasopressor- and mechanical ventilation-free days at day-14 and day-28,(at day-14 and day-28)

Study Sites (1)

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