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Effectiveness of a Walking Program Modulating Cardioreparative Factors in Heart Failure (EPCCHFWalk)

Vanderbilt University Medical Center logo

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Status

Completed

Conditions

Heart Failure

Treatments

Biological: Walking Exercise Group
Other: Physical Fitness

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00937443
Vanderbilt_University

Details and patient eligibility

About

The incidence of heart failure grows as the population continues to age. Heart failure incidence approaches 10 per 1,000 persons after the age of 65. Although pharmacotherapy improves the treatment of heart failure it remains insufficient in preventing the progression of this debilitating disease. Cell based therapy has gained great strides over the last decade, launching cellular therapy into the mix of artillery for the treatment of chronic heart failure and coronary disease. While early pre-clinical work demonstrates that stem cell based therapy improves heart failure the exact mechanism in which these endothelial progenitor cells (EPC's) are recruited from the bone marrow, proliferate under the mediation of growth factors, and migrate to the injured tissues endogenously still remains obscured. Therefore in order for clinicians and scientist to impact heart failure treatment, a greater understanding of the physiological changes in EPC's and other modulators of cardioreparative process need further investigation.

Full description

Heart failure remains a devastating progressive chronic disease in which pharmacotherapy is not often sufficient. Although cell based therapy is gaining publicity in the treatment of coronary artery disease and heart failure. Determining how endothelial progenitor cells are recruited, proliferate, and home to injured tissue is an important area of investigation. Equally important is determining factors which improve EPC stimulation and efficiency such as realistic levels of exercise and the modulation of various cardioreparative factors (VEGF, NRG-1, and SDF-1) within heart failure patients. Since the endogenous repair mechanism is down regulated in heart failure patients such efforts may uncover ways to tip the balance in heart failure back to normal reparative maintenance.

Enrollment

9 patients

Sex

All

Ages

30 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Subjects 30-65 years old.

  2. Subjects able to give Informed Consent.

  3. Subjects who will give permission for collection of clinical and demographic data from the electronic medical records.

  4. Subjects with symptomatic ischemic or non-ischemic heart failure in a stable condition with New York Heart Association class II-III for at least the last 3 months before study enrollment.

    • Left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) < 40%.
    • Peak volume of oxygen utilization (peak VO2) of < 25 ml/kg/min.
  5. Patient on a stable dose of statin or who can be initiated on statin therapy.

  6. Subjects with ischemic cardiomyopathy must have had either a negative stress test within the last 6 months or a cardiac catheterization within the last year confirming stable disease.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Subjects with myocardial infarction or unstable angina within the last six months.
  2. Subjects with symptomatic or severe aortic stenosis.
  3. Subjects with severe HTN (SBP > 180) or hypotension (SBP < 100).
  4. Subjects who are pregnant.
  5. Subjects who have bone marrow suppression.
  6. Subjects with exercise limiting peripheral arterial disease.
  7. Subjects with history of ventricular tachycardia without an implantable defibrillator
  8. Subjects with decompensated diabetes (HgA1c >10).
  9. Subjects with orthopedic limitations.
  10. Subjects with any other clinical condition precluding regular participation in walking exercise regimen.
  11. Subjects who already participate in regular physical exercise regimen for greater than 30 minutes a day 5 days per week.

Trial design

9 participants in 1 patient group

Walking Exercise Group
Description:
Walking Exercise Group versus Control Group
Treatment:
Other: Physical Fitness
Biological: Walking Exercise Group

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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