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EARLY Routine Catheterization After Alteplase Fibrinolysis vs. PPCI in ST-Segment-Elevation MYOcardial Infarction (EARLY-MYO)

Shanghai Jiao Tong University logo

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Acute ST-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction

Treatments

Procedure: Primary PCI
Procedure: Early post-fibrinolytic catheterisation
Drug: Alteplase

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01930682
BI135.326
12410708300 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The EARLY-MYO (EARLY routine catheterization after alteplase fibrinolysis vs. primary PCI in acute ST-segment elevation MYOcardial infarction) is an investigator-initiated, prospective, multicenter, randomized (1:1), open-label, actively-controlled, parallel group, non-inferiority trial comparing the efficacy and safety of a PhI strategy with half-dose fibrinolysis versus PPCI in STEMI patients presenting within 6 hours after symptom onset and with an expected PCI-related delay of ≥60 min.

Full description

Early, successful restoration of myocardial perfusion after a ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is the most effective way to reduce final infarct size and improve clinical outcome. Reperfusion for STEMI treatment in the modern era encompasses mechanical and pharmacological strategies. It is generally well-accepted that primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI) is the preferred reperfusion strategy for all STEMI patients when it can be performed within the guideline-recommended timeframe at PPCI-capable facilities. However, PPCI is not universally available, and delays in performing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) are common in real-world practice. Even in some large cities, patients have a high chance of presenting to hospitals not providing around-the-clock PPCI service. Given this background, in recent years there has been great interest and progress in creating triage strategies for STEMI patients who cannot receive timely PPCI.

Pharmaco-invasive (PhI) strategy, an early reperfusion strategy by initial prompt fibrinolysis with subsequent early catheterization (with either routine early PCI after successful fibrinolysis or rescue PCI as needed), has been proposed as a therapeutic option for STEMI patients when timely PPCI is not feasible. However, current evidence on the efficacy and safety of PhI strategy in STEMI patients is limited, and the role of PhI strategy in STEMI continues to be debated. Given that no randomized clinical trial is available to compare a PhI strategy with half-dose fibrinolytic regimen versus PPCI in STEMI patients, investigators plan to perform a controlled, randomized trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a PhI strategy with half-dose alteplase fibrinolysis versus PPCI in STEMI patients.

Enrollment

344 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 ;
  • Patents with an expected PCI-related delay [expected time delay from FMC to first balloon dilation≥90 min, and difference between the time of FMC to balloon dilation minus the time from FMC to start of fibrinolysis ≥60 minutes)];
  • Signed informed consent form prior to trial participation.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Evidence of cardiac rupture;

  2. ECG: new left bundle branch block;

  3. "Diagnosis to balloon inflation" time over 3 hours;

  4. Thrombolysis contradictions:

    • Definite cerebral apoplexy history;
    • Any history of central nervous system damage (i.e. neoplasm, aneurysm, intracranial or spinal surgery) or recent trauma to the head or cranium (i.e. < 3 months);
    • Active bleeding or known bleeding disorder/diathesis;
    • Recent administration of any i.v. or s.c. anticoagulation within 12 hours including unfractionated heparin, enoxaparin and/or bivalirudin or current use of oral anticoagulation(warfarin or coumadin);
    • Uncontrolled hypertension, defined as a single blood pressure measurement ≥ 180/110 mm Hg (systolic BP ≥ 180 mm Hg and/or diastolic BP ≥ 110 mm Hg) prior to randomisation;
    • Major surgery, biopsy of a parenchymal organ, or significant trauma within the past 2 months (this includes any trauma associated with the current myocardial infarction); Prolonged or traumatic cardiopulmonary resuscitation (> 10 minutes) within the past 2 Weeks Major surgery pending in the following 30 days;
  5. Severe complication

    • 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;
    • Known acute pericarditis and/or subacute bacterial endocarditis;
    • Arterial aneurysm, arterial/venous malformation and aorta dissection;
  6. Complex heart condition

    • Cardiogenic shock(SBP <90 mmHg after fluid infusion or SBP<100 mmHg after vasoactive drugs);
    • PCI within previous 1 month or Previous coronary-artery bypass surgery(CABG);
    • Previously known multivessel coronary artery disease not suitable for revascularization;
    • Hospitalisation for cardiac reason within past 48 hours;
  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 hypersensitivity 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

Single Blind

344 participants in 2 patient groups

Early post-fibrinolytic catheterisation
Experimental group
Description:
For STEMI Patients, alteplase is given as a intravenous bolus (8-mg) followed by 42 mg iv gtt in 90 min.Early routine catheterization after 3 hours but within 24 hours of the start of fibrinolytic therapy is performed, if required, PCI or, in case of insufficient ST resolution at 90 min,rescue PCI. The decision on rescue PCI will, however, be taken 90 min (or earlier if clinically indicated) after injection of alteplase according to the ST resolution (less than 50% reduction in ST-segment elevation).
Treatment:
Drug: Alteplase
Procedure: Early post-fibrinolytic catheterisation
Primary PCI
Other group
Description:
For STEMI Patients,primary PCI is performed without fibrinolytic therapy.
Treatment:
Procedure: Primary PCI

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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