Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The Super Rehab: Can we Achieve Coronary Artery Disease Regression? (a feasibility study) proposes to test the use of a novel lifestyle intervention (Super Rehab), in addition to standard care, for patients with both coronary artery disease and metabolic syndrome. This is a feasibility study that will test study processes, enable optimisation of the intervention and provide data for power calculations to enable design of pivotal trials of the clinical effectiveness of Super Rehab.
Full description
In this research we will study the feasibility of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) of a novel lifestyle intervention (Super Rehab), in addition to usual care, for patients with established coronary artery disease (CAD) and metabolic syndrome. Increasing evidence has shown that CAD can not only be stabilised, but can in fact regress with treatments that include lifestyle interventions.
This feasibility study will involve patients undergoing a clinically indicated coronary CT angiography (CCTA) scan who are found to have confirmed CAD with plaque causing a narrowing in at least one coronary artery of ≥25% of the lumen on their CTCA; have evidence of coronary inflammation (defined by an abnormal fat attenuation index (FAI) of > -70.1HU or with FAI score [relative to age and sex matched patients] ≥ 75th percentile in the left anterior coronary or right coronary artery or with FAI score ≥ 90th percentile in the circumflex coronary); have Metabolic Syndrome, defined as any 3 of: high abdominal waist circumference (≥94cm males, ≥80cm females), hypertension (≥130/85mmHg or on treatment), raised fasting glucose (≥5.6mmol/L or on diabetic treatment), low HDL (≤1mmol/L males, <1.3mmol/L females), and high triglycerides (>1.7mmol/L).
Participants will be randomised to either Super Rehab and Usual Care or to continue Usual Care only. Super Rehab includes a combination of separate 1:1 supervised high-intensity exercise and dietary advice sessions, and the whole programme lasts 12 months. Participants in both arms will undergo imaging, fitness, clinical tests (including blood tests), and complete questionnaires on four occasions during the study, alongside short interim and detailed end-of-study interviews.
The study will primarily assess key feasibility outcomes to guide a potential subsequent RCT, e.g. recruitment and retention rates and test the acceptability of the intervention and study processes. In addition, the study will provide baseline data for power calculations to support study design for the planned future RCT into the clinical effectiveness of Super Rehab in this patient group.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Jonathan Rodrigues; John Graby
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal