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The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether beta-blockers can improve coronary blood flow and reduce resistance in patients with angina and no obstructive coronary arteries (ANOCA).
The main questions it aims to answer are:
Researchers will compare a beta-blocker to a placebo to see if the medication has measurable effects on coronary circulation.
Participants will:
Full description
INTRODUCTION
Beta-blockers (BB) remain a mainstay in the management of cardiac diseases due to a wide range of cardiovascular effects. Through the antagonism of beta-adrenergic stimuli, BB reduce heart rate, cardiac contractility, and left ventricular wall stress, with the latter mediated in part by the antihypertensive action of the drug class. Whilst first-generation BB, such as propranolol, block both β1 and β2 adrenoceptors, second-generation BB (e.g. metoprolol and atenolol) are selective for β1 adrenoceptors and thus avoid the side effects seen with unwanted β2 adrenoceptor blockade, making them ideal antianginal and antiarrhythmic drugs. Third-generation BB - namely carvedilol and nebivolol - exert an additional vasodilatory effect through α-adrenoreceptor blockade and increased nitric oxide (NO) production, respectively, making them effective choices in the management of heart failure and hypertension.
Most recently, BB have been recommended for the treatment of coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD). CMD is an increasingly recognised pathology affecting patients both with and without coronary artery disease. Its treatment with drugs such as BB has been shown to improve both symptoms and quality of life, leading to its inclusion in the latest European and American guidelines.
Yet, whilst numerous studies have assessed the cardiovascular effects of beta-blockers, many have yielded discordant results regarding their effect on coronary function. Billinger et al. found that IV metoprolol was associated with a significant increase in hyperaemic flow as measured by intracoronary Doppler, with a corresponding decrease in total coronary resistance, among patients with epicardial disease. However, a later study by Togni et al. employing intracoronary Doppler before and after the administration of intracoronary nebivolol, reported a significant increase in coronary flow reserve (CFR) driven by a reduction in resting flow in patients without CAD, and an increase in maximal coronary flow in patients with CAD.
Studies employing nuclear imaging have also yielded inconsistent results. Böttcher et al. found that healthy volunteers who underwent 13N-ammonia PET at baseline and 1 hour after the administration of 50 mg of oral metoprolol exhibited a decrease in resting myocardial blood flow (MBF) in line with a corresponding decrease in cardiac work, but a significant increase in hyperaemic MBF. This ultimately resulted in an increase in CFR. Conversely, Koepfli et al. reported a significant decrease in resting myocardial blood flow but no significant change in hyperaemic MBF in 36 CAD patients who underwent 13N-ammonia PET before and after 12 weeks of oral metoprolol or carvedilol. Studies employing transthoracic Doppler have also reported discordant results.
Beyond the discordant results produced by many of these studies, there are several limitations associated with this work. First, no studies have employed a strict randomised, placebo-controlled design to isolate the true coronary effects of beta-blockers. Second, no studies have specifically explored the effect of BB on patients with ANOCA or CMD, an increasingly recognised patient group for which BB represent a guideline-recommended treatment. Third, there have been no studies that have specifically assessed the effect of BB on coronary microvascular function; by focusing on flow and CFR, a global coronary index that is not specific to the microvascular compartment, previous work has only assessed the effect of BB on overall coronary function without isolating their effect on the epicardial or microvascular compartments. Finally, none of these studies have employed continuous intracoronary thermodilution, a novel assessment modality that permits the precise and accurate measurement of absolute coronary flow and resistance in humans. This extensively validated technique permits the detailed assessment of the epicardial and microvascular compartments in isolation and has opened the door to previously inaccessible physiological studies.
GOAL OF THE STUDY
In the present study, continuous intracoronary thermodilution will be used to assess the cardiovascular effects of intravenous BB compared with a placebo control, with a focus on metrics of microvascular function, such as microvascular resistance and microvascular resistance reserve (MRR).
DESIGN
This is an investigator-initiated, prospective, double-blinded, randomised controlled study recruiting patients from a single centre undergoing diagnostic coronary angiography who are found to have angina and non-obstructive coronary arteries (ANOCA). Patients will be randomised between intravenous BB and placebo.
OVERVIEW OF THE STUDY PROTOCOL
Given that this is a mechanistic trial aiming to elucidate the true cardiovascular effects of BB, all recruited patients will have any pre-existing BB therapy/other vasoactive medications stopped 24 hours before the protocol.
(i) Protocol
The following protocol will be performed:
It is expected that the protocol, including the recording of both baseline and post-intervention values, will last ~15 minutes.
(ii) Randomisation Randomisation will be performed using the concealed envelope system by a dedicated study nurse in line with the pre-specified sample size calculation. Patients, operators, and all other clinical team members will be blinded to randomisation.
(iii) Measured parameters The following parameters will be recorded/calculated for rest and hyperaemic at both baseline as well as at 10 minutes after the administration of the intervention to capture the full effect of BB on both coronary and systemic haemodynamics.
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46 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Adriaan Wilgenhof, MD; Thabo Mahendiran, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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