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Early Intracoronary Administration of Fasudil in the Primary PCI of ST-segment-Elevation Myocardial Infarction

Shanghai Jiao Tong University logo

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 4

Conditions

ST Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction

Treatments

Drug: Placebo saline
Drug: Fasudil Hydrochloride

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03753269
EARLY-MYO-FASUDIL

Details and patient eligibility

About

The study aims to evaluate whether an early intracoronary administration of Fasudil Hydrochloride during primary PCI of STEMI can improve epicardial and myocardial perfusion as well as clinical outcomes.

Full description

Timely reperfusion therapy is the most effective treatment for acute STEMI patients. Primary PCI has been documented as the best method for restoration of epicardial blood flow. Nevertheless, recovery of epicardial blood flow does not necessarily equate to a sufficient reperfusion at myocardial level. Although epicardial TIMI 3 flow could be achieved in the majority of STEMI patients by contemporary PPCI, it has been well acknowledged that microvascular obstruction (MVO) is far more prevalent than the epicardial no-reflow phenomenon and has huge detrimental impact on clinical outcomes.

Routine thrombus aspiration by special catheter during primary PCI has shown negative or even harmful results in clinical trials. Distal coronary protective devices are also ineffective to improve myocardial perfusion. On the contrary, peri-procedual administration of several medications has shown possibilities to reduce MVO. These medications are mostly anti-platelet agents such as GP IIb/IIIa receptor and microvascular dilators like adenosine, sodium nitroprusside and verapamil. Theoretically, intracoronary delivery of medications can be more effective and potentially decrease side effects. Empirical application of aforementioned agents seems to improve the epicardial flow in patients not achieving TIMI 3 flow after PCI. However, it is debatable whether early administration of intracoronary medication (meaning before PCI) may further reduce MVO assuming it could be better to reduce reperfusion injury. However, this has not been well investigated yet.

Rho-associated protein kinase (Rho kinase) is expressed in many cells, including smooth muscle cells and vascular endothelial. Activation of Rho kinase leads to increased smooth muscle intracellular calcium and robust vasoconstriction. Fasudil hydrochloride is a rho-kinase inhibitor that severs clinically as a potent small vessel dilator, especially in the field of cerebral circulation. Meanwhile, It has been empirically used in individual STEMI cases and showed effectiveness in improving coronary flow for PCI therapy. This study aims to evaluate whether an early intracoronary administration of Fasudil Hydrochloride can improve myocardial perfusion and clinical outcomes for STEMI patients undergoing primary PCI. To ensure the complete delivery of agents within coronary, a special-designed targeted perfusion micro-catheter will be used for drug delivery. Patients in the control arm will be administrated by intracoronary saline.

For the results, coronary angiography-based index of epical and myocardial perfusion will be analyzed. MVO will be determined by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and quantified as the percentage of left ventricular myocardial mass (% LV). The rate of composite major adverse cardiac events (MACEs) at 30 days and 6 months since symptom onset will be the clinical outcomes.

Enrollment

600 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age: over 18 or 18 years old, less than 75 years old;

    • Patents with myocardial infarction who have symptom onset within 6h before randomization;
    • ECG: ≥2 mm ST-segment elevation in 2 contiguous precordial leads or ≥1 mm ST-segment elevation in 2 contiguous extremity leads ;
    • Signed informed consent form prior to trial participation

Exclusion criteria

  1. ECG with new left bundle branch block;

  2. Contraindications for CMR

  3. Repeated STEMI

  4. History of cardiovascular diseases

    • PCI within previous 1 month or Previous coronary-artery bypass surgery (CABG)
    • Previously known multi-vessel coronary artery disease not suitable for revascularization
    • Hospitalization for cardiac reason within past 48 hours
    • Known acute pericarditis and/or subacute bacterial endocarditis
    • Arterial aneurysm, arterial/venous malformation and aorta dissection;
  5. History of other severe diseases

    • Any other diseases with life expectancy ≤12 months
    • • Any history of severe renal or hepatic dysfunction (hepatic failure, cirrhosis, portal hypertension and active hepatitis); Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia; Known acute pancreatitis
  6. Severe cardiac complications

    • Any sign of cardiac rupture
    • Cardiogenic shock (SBP <90 mmHg after fluid infusion or SBP<100 mmHg after vasoactive drugs)
  7. Not suitable for clinical trial

    • Inclusion in another clinical trial;
    • Previous enrolment in this study or treatment with an investigational drug or device under another study protocol in the past 7 days;
    • Pregnancy or lactating;
    • Body weight <40kg or >125kg;
    • Known allergy to any drug that may appear in the study
    • Inability to follow the protocol and comply with follow-up requirements or any other reason that the investigator feels would place the patient at increased risk.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

600 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Fasudil Hydrochloride
Experimental group
Description:
Fasudil Hydrochoride will be delivered into culprit vessel right after the first wire passage
Treatment:
Drug: Fasudil Hydrochloride
Placebo saline
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Same volume of 0.9% saline will be delivered into culprit vessel right after the first wire passage
Treatment:
Drug: Placebo saline

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Heng Ge, M.D; Jun Pu, Professor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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