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The researchers would like to know more about cardiovascular abnormalities in patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMID) and with the aim to provide new biomarkers (clinical, blood, imaging) for early diagnosis, prognosis and prediction of CVD in patients with IMID. This is important as there are still many things that are not known about this and finding out more could improve how patients are treated in future.
Participants with IMID diagnoses will be recruited from rheumatology/cardiology departments as in-patients or outpatients.
Once consented, researchers will collect past, present and future clinical information about them, including routine cardiovascular imaging and blood tests. Participants will also be asked to complete questionnaires at predetermined intervals. The participants could also be approached to take part in the following sub-studies; Biological sub-study, in which blood and urine would be collected; And the Imaging-sub study, in which one or more of Echocardiography, Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging (CMR) and Laser Doppler Imaging (LDI) will be performed. Participants with CVD without IMID and healthy volunteers will also be recruited as comparison groups.
The research is to be funded by the NIHR Manchester BRC ('Integrated Cardiovascular' and 'Rheumatic & Musculoskeletal Diseases' themes). Other funding eg Manchester Academic Health Sciences and a recently awarded Medical Research Council Partnership grant will also support this programme. The study will recruit in specialist NHS centres; Recruitment will start in Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
Full description
Immune-mediated-inflammatory-diseases (IMID) are a range of illnesses affecting over 1 million people in the UK.
Targeted treatments have changed outcomes of common IMIDs, but mortality is still high, largely due to premature cardiovascular disease (CVD). IMID includes the common rheumatoid arthritis (RA), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and related conditions, and rare diseases such as systemic sclerosis (SSc), idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) and vasculitides. Increased risk of CVD and death in IMID contributes to inflammation and cardio metabolic disorders which includes accelerated atherosclerosis, microvascular dysfunction and myocardial and pericardial disease. The research has shown people with RA have a 50% higher risk for CVD than the general population and up to 35% of deaths in patients with SSc are due to cardiac causes.
The biological mechanisms underlying CVD in IMIDs remain largely unknown. Two comparable IMID patients may have significant differences in the presence of CVD and the reasons for this are poorly understood. Despite the significant morbidity and mortality associated with CVD in IMID patients, identification of at-risk patients early in the disease to start treatments and improve prognosis remains challenging. Difficulties also persist in tailoring treatments for people with IMID and existing CVD and there is an evidence gap in treating certain kind of cardiovascular involvement for example, myocarditis. This proposed study will address the missing gaps of the current knowledge. The longitudinal collection and evaluation of routine clinical information and imaging data at different stages of disease will allow the researchers to develop a prognostic model to identify risk factors for CVD in IMID and identify at-risk IMID patients. In addition, the biological and imaging sub-studies will allow the researchers to gain comprehensive insights into the mechanisms underlying CVD in IMID patients, including molecular pathways, genetics and imaging biomarkers. This programme of work will generate important pilot data that will inform subsequent definitive and fully powered studies.
Any potentially eligible patients seen at the relevant rheumatology/cardiology departments as part of in-patient, outpatient and/or multi-disciplinary team meetings and identified as per usual clinical practice may be eligible for inclusion in this observational programme; these patients will be classified as IMID patients at-risk of CVD (IMID-'at risk' CVD), IMID patients with documented new major adverse cardiovascular event (MACE) (Incident IMID-CVD) and IMID patients with previous MACE (Established IMID-CVD). Three groups of control patients will also be recruited; IMID patients with no risk of CVD, patients with CVD but no IMID diagnosis and healthy volunteers.
The doctor will explain to the patient about the study and, if they are interested provide them with the information leaflet.
The participant will have the opportunity to ask the research staff questions after they have seen the paperwork.
Patients may consent same day and/or be given the opportunity to discuss the trial with their family before they are asked whether they would be willing to take part in the trial. If English is not the patient's first language every effort will be made to provide a Trust interpreter according to normal Trust procedures. This is an observational longitudinal study where past, present and future routine clinical data and tests (such as hospital presentations, blood tests, imaging) and/or additional sub-study specific research data will be collected and entered into a database. Following consent, data will be obtained as per usual clinical visits and assessments.
Patients are seen as per standard clinical practice determined by the index IMID and in this setting, also dependent on co-existing CV comorbidity. This would usually be every 6 months at time of IMID/CVD diagnosis and then 12 monthly thereafter. Following consent, data from before this time point may be obtained through the available health records.
Participants will also be asked to complete questionnaires determined by their IMID diagnosis and/or CVD profile at follow up appointments. These will be returned to the University of Manchester along with a registration form that will include confirmation of a participant's contact information. Patients will be given the opportunity to consent to the biological and/or imaging sub-studies. Unlike the main study, participants will be asked to undergo biological tests (blood tests or urine sample if applicable) or imaging tests (echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, peripheral imaging) in addition to routine standard care.
Where possible, these additional tests will be combined with routine clinical care to minimise inconvenience to the participant, for example collecting additional blood tests at same time of routine clinical blood test. The additional imaging studies would need to be done on a separate visit to the routine clinical follow up.
All procedures will be carried out by their local NHS clinical or research team at the Unit they are normally seen in MFT (MRI/Wythenshawe site) based on usual site of care, and will be carried out by trained staff. This is designed to fit around standard care as much as possible and provide as little inconvenience as possible to potential participants.
All control subjects will be treated in the same way patient participants are; The face-to-face consent process will be the same. The research team will explain what is required of them, what procedures they would be undertaking, and the detail of these and where they would occur. Patient-reported outcomes relevant to the IMID and/or CVD profile may be taken at each visit, if the participant consents to this. These may include RAQoL, HAQ, EQ-5D, ScleroID and clinician assessed New York Heart Association (NYHA) classification (based on the patient history). The research staff at the recruiting centre will access participant's medical records, where consent is provided for them to do so. They will enter appropriate research data into an electronic case report form (eCRF) on the hospital site. In the eCRF, participants will be identified by study number only. No personal identifiable information (PII) will be included in the eCRF.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Main Study
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Exclusion Criteria:
Imaging Sub-Study
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Biological Sub-Study
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Exclusion Criteria:
Controls
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Exclusion Criteria:
For Healthy controls:
The researchers will aim to identify healthy controls using the 'bring a friend' strategy where the patient is asked to bring a friend/relative, thus minimising demographic bias. This will establish a healthy control pool. For specific analyses, controls will be age and sex matched and where possible, BMI-matched to the specific study population.
325 participants in 8 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Maya H Buch, MD; James Lawrence, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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