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Occluded Artery Trial (OAT)

NYU Langone Health logo

NYU Langone Health

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

Heart Failure, Congestive
Myocardial Infarction
Cardiovascular Diseases
Heart Failure
Heart Diseases

Treatments

Drug: Beta adrenergic blockers
Drug: ACE Inhibitors
Drug: Platelet inhibitors
Procedure: PTCA and stents

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT00004562
U01HL062509-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
130

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine whether opening an occluded infarcted artery 3-28 days after an acute myocardial infarction in high-risk asymptomatic patients reduces the composite endpoint of mortality, recurrent myocardial infarction, and hospitalization for class IV congestive heart failure over an average 2.9-year follow-up with extended follow up for an average of six years. Long term follow-up of patients were completed in March 2010. Final collection of all regulatory documentation was completed June 2011.

Full description

BACKGROUND:

The benefits of establishing early coronary reperfusion in acute myocardial infarction (MI) have now been unequivocally established. However, current pharmacologic strategies fail to achieve effective reperfusion in 30 percent or more of patients, and many patients with occluded infarct arteries do not meet current criteria for use of these agents. Early angioplasty, an effective reperfusion method, is available to a small proportion of potentially eligible US acute MI patients. Hence a substantial number of acute MI patients pass the time when reperfusion therapy has any documented benefit (12 - 24 hours) with a persistently closed infarct vessel. Several lines of experimental and clinical evidence suggest that late reperfusion of these patients could provide clinically significant reductions in mortality and morbidity.

DESIGN NARRATIVE:

Multicenter, randomized, controlled. Patients at 217 clinical sites in the United States, Canada and Internationally were randomly allocated to two treatment arms over five years. One treatment consists of conventional medical management including aspirin, beta blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, and risk factor modification. The other treatment consists of conventional medical therapy plus percutaneous coronary intervention and coronary stenting. Clinical outcomes will be compared using an intention-to-treat analysis. The primary composite endpoint is mortality, recurrent myocardial infarction, and hospitalization for NYHA Class IV congestive heart failure over a three year follow-up. Individual components of the study composite primary endpoint will be compared in the two treatment arms, as will the medical costs of the two treatments and the health-related quality of life. The cost-effectiveness of percutaneous revascularization will be assessed in the study population.

Enrollment

2,201 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Recent MI (3-28 days) (Day 1 is the calendar day of the MI system onset)
  • MI is defined based on at least 2 of 3 MI criteria confirmed by: 1) ischemic symptoms ≥30 minutes, 2) cardiac serum marker elevation (creatine kinase (CK) ≥2x upper limit of normal and CK-MB elevated above the upper limit of the laboratory normal) or troponin T, or troponin I elevated at least twice the upper limit of normal, 3) EKG: New Q-waves of ≥0.03 sec and/or 1/3 of QRS complex in ≥2 related EKG leads. If cardiac serum markers are elevated (2), any one of the following EKG findings satisfy inclusion criteria; new ST-T changes (ST elevation or depression), new left bundle-branch block (LBBB), loss of R-wave voltage ≥50% in ≥2 related leads or deep T wave inversions ≥3mm in ≥2 leads.
  • TIMI flow 0 or 1 in infarct related artery (IRA)
  • Meets criteria for high risk: EF <50% or site of occlusion is proximal, in left anterior descending (proximal to the second major diagonal branch); large right coronary artery; or circumflex, if supplying large obtuse marginal, and part of inferior wall (i.e., large dominant or co-dominant vessel).

Exclusion criteria

  • Age <18 y
  • Clinical indication for revascularization defined as follows: rest or low-threshold angina after MI; severe inducible ischemia on low level exercise or pharmacological stress testing (ST decreased ≥2 mm or inability to complete stage 1 or achieve 3-4 metabolic equivalents without angina, hypotension, or reversible perfusion defects in multiple territories or decreased wall motion thickening in >2 segments on echocardiogram); left main coronary disease (≥50% stenosis); or triple-vessel disease (3 major epicardial coronaries with >70% stenoses)
  • Serious illness such as cancer or pulmonary disease that limits 3-year survival
  • Severe renal disease defined as serum creatinine >3.0 mg/dL that markedly increases risk of radiographic contrast
  • Severe valvular disease
  • History of anaphylaxis to radiographic contrast
  • Infarct artery too small (reference segment diameter <2.5 mm), target segment within or beyond extreme tortuosity (>90° angulation), or otherwise technically a poor candidate for PCI
  • Chronic occlusion of IRA (seen on angiogram obtained before index MI or angiographic evidence of chronicity, e.g., presence of bridging collaterals)
  • NYHA classes III-IV CHF; patients may be treated for acute heart failure complicating MI and rescreened
  • Cardiogenic shock or sustained hypotension: systolic BP <90 mm Hg or cardiac index <2.2 L/min per m^2
  • LV aneurysm in the same location as index MI and present before index MI
  • Inability to cooperate with the protocol
  • Patient refusal or inability to give informed consent
  • Refusal of patient's physician to allow patient to participate
  • Pregnancy
  • Contraindication to anticoagulation during PCI or to routine antiplatelet therapy after stent implantation
  • Qualifying IRA that has been grafted previously; patients with prior CABG may be enrolled if the IRA was not previously grafted
  • Dilated or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

2,201 participants in 2 patient groups

Optimal Medical Therapy Only (MED)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Conventional medical management, including aspirin, beta blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, and risk factor modification
Treatment:
Drug: Platelet inhibitors
Drug: ACE Inhibitors
Drug: Beta adrenergic blockers
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI)
Experimental group
Description:
Conventional medical management, including aspirin, beta blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, and risk factor modification, plus percutaneous coronary intervention and coronary stenting
Treatment:
Procedure: PTCA and stents
Drug: Platelet inhibitors
Drug: ACE Inhibitors
Drug: Beta adrenergic blockers

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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