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The proposed Phase I/II clinical trial will be used to determine the safety and toxicity of direct administration of the vector AdVEGF-All6A+ to the ischemic myocardium and to generate preliminary evidence regarding whether direct administration of AdVEGF-All6A+ to the ischemic myocardium will induce growth of collateral blood vessels and improve cardiac function. This is a three-part, multinational/multi-center, placebo controlled study.
Full description
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the predominant cause of heart failure, a major cause of death and disability throughout the world. Although prognosis of patients with CAD has been greatly improved by advances in cardiovascular treatment, it is still the first cause of death in the USA. Treatment options for CAD include diet, exercise, medication, balloon angioplasty with or without stenting, atherectomy and bypass surgery. For many patients, however, the disease is diffuse and stenting or bypass surgery is not an option. A new strategy to treat these patients is to use gene therapy to induce new networks of new blood vessels to bypass the arterial system that is blocked, thus providing circulation to deliver oxygen needed by the tissue. By administering a gene coding for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) to the myocardium, new networks of blood vessels can be created using the genetic material for VEGF. In experimental animal studies, VEGF is effective at treating ischemia of organs and is safe. The most direct method of transferring genes to myocardium is by injection under direct vision during a minimally invasive thoracic surgery. For the present study, the VEGF gene will be delivered to the myocardium using a modified adenovirus (Ad) as a carrier. The study is designed to test the safety and efficacy of AdVEGF-All6A+.
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0 participants in 5 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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