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Prevention of Acute Myocardial Injury by Trimetazidine in Patients Hospitalized for COVID-19 (PREMIER)

M

Ministry of Health, Brazil

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 2

Conditions

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Covid19
Myocardial Injury

Treatments

Drug: Trimetazidine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04760821
SDC5100/20/129

Details and patient eligibility

About

Acute myocardial injury has been a finding of variable frequency among patients diagnosed with COVID-19. It is now recognized that cTnI levels are strongly associated with increased mortality. The mechanisms underlying the myocardial injury remain unknown, and it is not clear whether they reflect local/systemic inflammatory process and/or cellular ischemia.

Both myocardial ischemia and ventricular dysfunction result in dramatic changes in mitochondrial oxidative metabolism. These changes involve an increase in the rate of cytoplasmic anaerobic glycolysis to compensate for the decrease in mitochondrial adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production. The rest of the mitochondrial oxidative metabolism originates mainly from the β-oxidation of free fatty acids, which occurs at the expense of glucose oxidation.

Trimetazidine is a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme 3-ketoacyl coenzyme A (CoA) long-chain thiolase (3-KAT), the last enzyme involved in the oxidation of fatty acids. Stimulation of glucose oxidation by trimetazidine results in a better coupling between glycolysis and glucose oxidation, with a consequent decrease in lactate production and intracellular acidosis, present in situations of myocardial ischemia or heart failure.

Thus, the PREMIER-COVID-19 study was designed to test the hypothesis that the use of trimetazidine associated with usual therapy in patients admitted with a diagnosis of moderate to severe acute respiratory syndrome by SARS-CoV2 infection reduces the extent of acute myocardial injury assessed by the peak release of ultra-sensitive troponin compared to usual therapy.

Full description

Acute myocardial injury, defined by increased levels of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I (cTnI), has been a finding of variable frequency among patients diagnosed with COVID-19. This myocardial impairment can occur in the form of acute myocarditis or an injury secondary to the imbalance between oxygen supply and demand (type 2 myocardial infarction). It is now recognized that cTnI levels are strongly associated with increased mortality. The mechanisms underlying the myocardial injury remain unknown, and it is not clear whether they reflect local/systemic inflammatory process and/or cellular ischemia.

Both myocardial ischemia and ventricular dysfunction result in dramatic changes in mitochondrial oxidative metabolism. These changes involve an increase in cytoplasmic anaerobic glycolysis rate to compensate for the decrease in mitochondrial ATP production. Unfortunately, the increase in glycolysis exceeds the subsequent mitochondrial oxidation capacity of pyruvate (glucose oxidation) derived from glycolysis, resulting in the intracellular accumulation of lactate and protons. The protons produced from this decoupling between glycolysis and glucose oxidation contribute to a rupture in ionic homeostasis and myocardial cells, resulting in lower cardiac efficiency. In both the ischemic heart and the insufficient heart, the rest of the mitochondrial oxidative metabolism originates mainly from the β-oxidation of free fatty acids, which occurs at the expense of glucose oxidation.

Trimetazidine is a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme 3-ketoacyl CoA long-chain thiolase (3-KAT), the last enzyme involved in the oxidation of fatty acids. Stimulation of glucose oxidation by trimetazidine results in a better coupling between glycolysis and glucose oxidation, with a consequent decrease in lactate production and intracellular acidosis present in situations of myocardial ischemia or heart failure.

Thus, the PREMIER-COVID-19 study (open and randomized) was designed to test the hypothesis that the use of trimetazidine associated with usual therapy in patients admitted with a diagnosis of moderate to severe acute respiratory syndrome by SARS-CoV2 infection reduces the extent of acute myocardial injury assessed by the peak release of ultra-sensitive troponin compared to usual therapy. Investigators will also assess, as secondary outcomes, the impact on clinical evolution to more severe forms (admission to the intensive care unit or the need for mechanical ventilatory support, length of stay in hospital and in-hospital mortality).

Enrollment

80 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

A. Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Clinical diagnosis of moderate to severe acute respiratory syndrome due to SARS-CoV2 defined as:

    1.1. Tachypnea: > 24 breaths per minute 1.2. Hypoxemia: arterial oxygen saturation <94% in room air by pulse oximetry 1.3. Presumptive (or confirmed) diagnosis of SARS-Cov2 infection by at least one of the following criteria:

    1. Polymerase chain reaction assay (+) for SARS-CoV2
    2. Serology (+) for SARS-CoV2
    3. SARS-CoV2 antigen diagnostic tests (+)
    4. Chest CT with findings suggestive of the diagnosis of COVID-19 in the presence of medical history or clinical signs compatible with the diagnosis of COVID-19
  2. Signature of the Informed Consent Form

B. Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Chronic renal dysfunction stage 4 (GFR <30mL / min / 1.73m2 calculated by the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) equation
  2. Patient on renal replacement therapy by dialysis
  3. Pregnant and lactating women
  4. Previous use of trimetazidine less than two weeks before hospital admission
  5. Any clinical condition at the investigator´s discretion likely to be associated with elevation of baseline hs-troponin >99th percentile

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

80 participants in 2 patient groups

Usual Care
No Intervention group
Description:
Patients ascribed to the Usual Care group will receive the standard of care for the management of patients admitted with moderate to severe acute respiratory distress syndrome due to SARS-CoV2. Usual Care means the clinical protocol approved by the enrolling center.
Trimetazidine
Experimental group
Description:
Patients ascribed to the Usual Care group will receive the standard of care for the management of patients admitted with moderate to severe acute respiratory distress syndrome due to SARS-CoV2 plus trimetazidine.Usual Care means the clinical protocol approved by the enrolling center.
Treatment:
Drug: Trimetazidine

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Luis Henrique Wolff Gowdak, MD, PhD; Felipe Gallego Lima, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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