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Statin and Atheroma Vulnerability Evaluation (STABLE)

S

Seung-Jung Park

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Coronary Artery Disease

Treatments

Drug: Rosuvastatin calcium10mg
Drug: Rosuvastatin calcium 40mg

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00997880
2008-0361

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of statin therapy on the modification of atherosclerotic plaque composition and vulnerability in non-intervened coronary arteries with mild to moderate stenosis using VH-IVUS and OCT.

Full description

At present, there is no proven drug or modality to stabilize the vulnerable plaques. A number of drugs that are beneficial for patients with coronary disease may act in part by improving the stability of plaques that are vulnerable for future rupture. Especially, Lipid-lowering therapy, particularly with statins, can stabilize vulnerable plaques or those that have already ruptured by improving endothelial function and reducing thrombogenicity, platelet aggregation, and possibly inflammation. As the atherosclerotic disease has progressed, there is an increase of the atherosclerotic plaque amounts. However, the changes of specific plaque compositions within the atherosclerotic lesions have not been sufficiently evaluated. Previous pathologic findings reported that there was a significant relation between the plaque size and necrotic core size.Conventional grey-scale intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) has significant limitations in accurately assessing atheromatous plaque composition. These limitations have been partially addressed by radiofrequency signal processing with spectral analysis of the back-scattered ultrasound signals. Using this technology, Virtual Histology (VH) IVUS is capable of characterizing plaque as calcified (white), fibrotic (dark-green), fibrofatty (yellow-green), and necrotic core (red). In addition, optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a light-based imaging modality that can be used in biological systems to study tissues in vivo with near-histologic, ultrahigh resolution. The rationale for intravascular application of OCT is its potential for in vivo visualizations of the coronary artery microstructure. This unique image resolution of OCT offers the potential to detect key features of vulnerable plaque in vivo. Beyond the inherent limitations of angioscopy and intravascular ultrasound, OCT might offer a much higher sensitivity in the detection of necrotic/lipid cores within coronary atheromas. Therefore, plaque characterization using VH-IVUS and OCT may provide detailed morphologic insights of plaque vulnerability.

We hypothesized that statin would provide benefits to stabilize coronary plaque composition by LDL-reduction and/or a pleiotropic effect. We also hypothesized that high-dose statin would be more beneficial in reducing the vulnerable plaque and stabilizing the vulnerable plaque composition than low-dose statin.

Enrollment

312 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Male or female at least 18 years of age inclusive.
  2. Patients with stable (CCS class 1 to 4) or acute coronary syndromes (unstable angina pectoris Braunwald class IB, IC, IIB, IIC, IIIB, IIIC or NSTEMI) or patients with atypical chest pain or without symptoms but having documented myocardial ischemia who will undergo either planned coronary angiography, or percutaneous coronary intervention
  3. Non-culprit de novo lesion in a native coronary artery with at least one deferred coronary lesion with 1) visually-estimated angiographic % diameter stenosis 20-50% or 2) % diameter stenosis >50% without any evidence of inducible ischemia (FFR≥0.8 or negative perfusion on thiallium scan or negative treadmill test). Index lesion should have at least 1 fibroatheroma or TCFA.
  4. The patient or guardian agrees to the study protocol and the schedule of clinical and angiographic follow-up, and provides informed, written consent, as approved by the appropriate Institutional Review Board/Ethical Committee of the respective clinical site

Exclusion criteria

  1. Planned cardiac surgery (e.g., CABG, valve repair or replacement, or aneurysmectomy) or planned major non-cardiac surgery within the study period
  2. Stroke or resuscitated sudden death in the past 6 months
  3. Chronic disease requiring treatment with oral, intravenous, or intra-articular corticosteroids (use of topical, inhaled, or nasal corticosteroids is permissible)
  4. Untreated hyperthyroidism, or hypothyroidism with TSH levels more than 1.5 times upper limit of normal
  5. A diagnosis of cancer (other than superficial squamous or basal cell skin cancer) in the past 3 years or current treatment for the active cancer
  6. Any clinically significant abnormality identified at the screening visit, physical examination, laboratory tests, or electrocardiogram which, in the judgment of the Investigator, would preclude safe completion of the study
  7. Evidence of congestive heart failure, or left ventricular ejection fraction < 40%
  8. Significant renal disease manifested by serum creatinine > 2.0mg/dL, or creatinine clearance of < 40 ml/min (by Cockcroft-Gault method)
  9. Hepatic disease or biliary tract obstruction, or significant hepatic enzyme elevation (ALT or AST > 3 times upper limit of normal)
  10. History of myopathy or elevated creatine kinase (CK) > 3 times upper normal limit at screening
  11. History of adult asthma manifested by bronchospasm in the past 6 months, or currently taking regular anti-asthmatic medication(s)
  12. Unwillingness or inability to comply with the procedures described in this protocol
  13. History of any arterial bypass or angioplastic intervention involving the target vessel
  14. The luminal narrowing in the target vessel or in the left main coronary artery >50% by visual inspection of angiogram
  15. Luminal diameter of the target vessel < 2.5mm by visual inspection of coronary angiogram
  16. Presence of thrombus or complex plaque morphology in the target vessel that suggests a high likelihood of distal embolism
  17. Severe tortuosity of the target vessel or any other anatomical reasons that the investigator deems inappropriate for IVUS procedures

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

312 participants in 2 patient groups

Rosuvastatin calcium 40mg
Experimental group
Description:
high-dose (40mg rosuvastatin)
Treatment:
Drug: Rosuvastatin calcium 40mg
Rosuvastatin calcium10mg
Active Comparator group
Description:
low-dose statin (10mg rosuvastatin)
Treatment:
Drug: Rosuvastatin calcium10mg

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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