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• The aim of the VIP study is to investigate the impact of vulnerability markers (inflammatory serum biomarkers for systemic vulnerability, coronary shear stress and vulnerability mapping for pancoronary vulnerability, and imaging-based plaque features for systemic vulnerability) on the rate of major adverse cardiovascular events caused by progression of the non-culprit lesion in patients with acute ST or non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction who undergo revascularization of the culprit lesion during the acute event. Furthermore, the study will evaluate the rate of progression of non-culprit lesions towards a higher degree of vulnerability, based on coronary computed tomography angiographic assessment at 1 year after enrollment.
Full description
The project is a prospective, cohort, mono-centric study which will be carried out in the Center of Advanced Research in Multimodal Cardiac Imaging Cardiomed.
The project will include 100 subjects who present ST and non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction at 30 days prior to study enrollment, who underwent emergency revascularization of the culprit lesion. Samples for systemic serum biomarkers for myocardial injury, myocardial strain and enhanced systemic inflammation will be collected at the moment of the acute event. All patients will undergo coronary CT angiography, cardiac perfusion CT and intracoronary imaging procedures (Intravascular ultrasound - IVUS; Optical Coherence Tomography - OCT) at the moment of enrollment in the study, for complex assessment of non-culprit coronary lesions. The endothelial coronary shear stress will be calculated with imaging post-processing techniques on the CT data acquired at baseline, by using computational fluid dynamics.
The study will be conducted over a period of 3 years, in which patients will be examined at baseline, and during several follow-up visits. At the one-year follow-up, the study subjects will undergo CT coronary angiography for re-evaluation of the non-culprit lesions, in the prospects of analyzing the rate of plaque progression towards a higher degree of vulnerability. At the end of the 3-year period, patients will be assessed about the occurrence of major adverse cardiovascular events and the rate or revascularization for non-culprit lesions.
Study objectives:
Primary: to investigate the association between systemic, pancoronary and local vulnerability features of coronary plaques and the risk for major adverse cardiac events - MACE (all-cause mortality, cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, repeated revascularization, repeated hospitalizations for cardiovascular related incidents, cerebrovascular events) during a 3-year follow-up.
Secondary: to assess the rate of progression for the non-culprit lesions towards a higher degree of vulnerability, as evaluated via coronary CT angiography at 1 year after enrollment, in relation to systemic, pancoronary and local vulnerability features at baseline.
To identify the type of vulnerability (systemic, pancoronary or local) with the highest impact on plaque progression and future MACE
Study Timeline:
Baseline (day 0)
Visit 1 (month 1)
Visit 2 (month 3)
• Telephone follow-up
Visit 3 (month 6)
Visit 4 (month 12)
Visit 5 (month 15)
• Telephone follow-up
Visit 6 (month 18)
• Telephone follow-up
Visit 7 (month 24)
Visit 8 (month 30)
• Telephone follow-up
Final study visit (month 36)
Study procedures:
Data collection: In a dedicated database that includes all patient information, demographics, medical history, medication, therapeutic procedures, information derived from imaging techniques (echocardiography, CT angiography, CT imaging post-processing and shear stress evaluation).
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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