ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Efficacy Study on Early Versus Late Abciximab Administration During Primary Coronary Angioplasty

U

University of Pisa

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Myocardial Infarction

Treatments

Drug: abciximab

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT00354406
UP-DCT-200601

Details and patient eligibility

About

Abciximab has been demonstrated to improve outcome when administered during primary angioplasty in patients with acute myocardial infarction. The Primary Objective of the study is to demonstrate that early (before transportation form remote hospital to the cath lab) abciximab administration during acute myocardial infarction reduces infarct size as compared with late (just prior to PCI) abciximab administration, as measured by delayed enhancement magnetic resonance (MR) at 6 months.

Full description

Strategies directed at improving myocardial perfusion or viability in the setting of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) are currently suboptimal. The consequences of microvascular damage, as assessed by the TIMI myocardial perfusion (TMP) grade or by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MR), are serious and affect survival after AMI. Because the size of the infarct is an important predictor of prognosis, precise determination of infarct size allows risk stratification of patients after AMI.

First-pass MR perfusion studies recently developed provide quantification of the absolute measure of myocardial blood flow as well as direct visualization of myocardial perfusion abnormalities, such as areas of "no-reflow". The hyperenhancement technique (Delayed enhancement) identifies viable and nonviable myocardium as well as no-reflow areas.

A recent pilot study showed that infarct size measured by scintigraphy at 7 days was 23% vs 14% when abciximab was administered in the cath lab vs emergency room, with a reduction in infarct size of 40%.

The present study will be conducted at the Cardiothoracic Department of the University of Pisa together with the Institute of Clinical Physiology (CNR) and two other Cath Labs of the West of Tuscany. Each Cath Lab will treat patients enrolled in peripheral hospitals referring the patients for primary PCI.

The primary objective of the study is to demonstrate that early abciximab administration (before transfer) as compared with late abciximab administration (in the Cath Lab) reduces infarct size as measured by delayed hyperenhancement imaging at 6 months.

The major secondary objectives of this substudy are to demonstrate that early abciximab administration:

  1. Improves angiographic TMP grade and cTFC compared with primary PCI group, immediately after PCI.
  2. Reduces the extension of no-reflow areas, as assessed by DE-MRI before discharge.
  3. Reduces the extension of microvasculature damage as assessed by fist-pass perfusion study by MRI before discharge.
  4. Improves regional wall motion and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) as measured by cine MR and 2D echocardiography at 6 months
  5. Reduces the occurrence of LV remodeling at 6 month follow up.

Enrollment

110 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Prolonged, continuous signs and symptoms of ischemia lasting more than 20 min, starting within 6 hours prior to randomization, and ST segment elevation ≥ 2mm or new left bundle branch block
  • Absence of contraindications to Abciximab (for details cf. below section)
  • Written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Low-risk (ST elevation in ≤2 leads) inferior AMI
  • Previous infarction in the same area (assessed by ECG)
  • PCI in the 2 weeks prior to AMI
  • Know hypersensitivity to abciximab
  • Active internal bleeding
  • History of cerebrovascular accident in the previous 2 years or cerebrovascular accident with a significant residual neurological deficit
  • Head or spine surgery or trauma in the previous 2 months
  • Recent (within six weeks) gastrointestinal (GI) or genitourinary (GU) bleeding of clinical significance
  • Administration of oral anticoagulants within seven days unless prothrombin time is <1.2 times control
  • Bleeding diathesis or severe uncontrolled arterial hypertension
  • Thrombocytopenia (<100 000 cells/mL)
  • Recent (within six weeks) major surgery or trauma
  • Intracranial neoplasm, arteriovenous malformation, or aneurysm
  • Severe renal or liver failure
  • Allergy to aspirin
  • Contraindication to MRI examination

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

110 participants in 2 patient groups

A
Experimental group
Description:
Patients in Arm A (Early abciximab arm) will receive abciximab at time of STEMI diagnosis, before transfer to the Cath Lab to undergo primary angioplasty.
Treatment:
Drug: abciximab
B
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients in Arm B (Late abciximab arm) will receive abciximab at time of primary angioplasty, directly in the Cath Lab.
Treatment:
Drug: abciximab

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems