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The Efficacy and Safty of Proton Pump Inhibitor (Lansoprazole) (PPI)

D

Daejeon St. Mary's hospital

Status and phase

Not yet enrolling
Phase 4

Conditions

Coronary Artery Disease

Treatments

Drug: Lansoprazole 15 mg

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Among patients who performed percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), enrollment is performed in patients with moderate risk in gastrointestinal risk assessment indicators. After obtaining the consent form, patients are randomly assigned to the gastric acid secretion inhibitor group and the non-dose group.

Researchers and subjects proceed with the treatment group assignment, treatment-group assignment uses a random number table and the assigned drug is disclosed. Random checks are generated by statisticians and managed by the researchers.

In the test group, the incidence of gastrointestinal clinical events in DAPT patients is expected to be low while taking PPI, but there is a burden of PPI costs. In the case of the control group, the burden of PPI costs is reduced, but there is a possibility that the incidence of clinical events may occur, although it is a small number. Subjects in the test group will take DAPT for at least 6 months from the time of registration, and NSAIDs drugs or steroids and NOAC or warfarin should be prohibited as combination taboo drugs when participating in the study. Data will be collected during normal medical procedures and will be checked through an endoscope in case of upper gastrointestinal bleeding

Full description

  1. Purpose : This study compares gastrointestinal and cardiovascular events with coronary artery disease (CAD) patients who underwent percutaneous coronary angioplasty in patients with moderate gastrointestinal bleeding risk with use of dual antiplatelet drugs (DAPT), especially controversial use of prophylactic acid secretion inhibitors, and attempts to confirm the effectiveness and safety of gastric acid secretion inhibitors

  2. Background : DPAT is a standard treatment in patients with CAD with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). However, it is important to consider the GI bleeding risk when using DAPT and to determine whether Proton Pump Inhibitor (PPI) should be prescribed to prevent such accidents. DAPT, or aspirin and P2Y12 receptor inhibitor, complementarily reduce platelet activation and aggregation and consequently reduce the progression of coronary thrombosis.

    We have reported whether PPI use is associated with ischemic events or mortality in patients with DAPT up to date, but we have shown conflicting results depending on the type of study conducted. Observational studies generally show that PPI increases all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, angina and stroke, while RCT studies show that it does not. This difference can be explained by the selection bias. This is because observational studies attempt to reduce selective bias through correction of basic patient characteristics, but unmeasured differences in underlying variables continue to affect the results.

  3. method : Among patients who performed PCI in patients with CAD, enrollment is performed in patients with moderate risk in gastrointestinal risk assessment indicators. After obtaining the consent form, patients are randomly assigned to the gastric acid secretion inhibitor group and the non-dose group.

Researchers and subjects proceed with the treatment group assignment, treatment-group assignment uses a random number table and the assigned drug is disclosed. Random checks are generated by statisticians and managed by the researchers.

In the test group, the incidence of gastrointestinal clinical events in DAPT patients is expected to be low while taking PPI, but there is a burden of PPI costs. In the case of the control group, the burden of PPI costs is reduced, but there is a possibility that the incidence of clinical events may occur, although it is a small number. Subjects in the test group will take DAPT for at least 6 months from the time of registration, and NSAIDs drugs or steroids and NOAC or warfarin should be prohibited as combination taboo drugs when participating in the study. Data will be collected during normal medical procedures and will be checked through an endoscope in case of upper gastrointestinal bleeding

Enrollment

300 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

19+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 19 years of age or older
  • Coronary artery disease has one or more of the following
  • Stable angina
  • unstable angina
  • N on ST elevation myocardial infarction
  • ST elevation myocardial infarction
  • Those who are scheduled to receive or are taking dual antiplatelet therapy including aspirin after PCI trials
  • A person whose risk of bleeding falls under an intermediate risk group.

Exclusion criteria

  • age < 19 years
  • known allergy to aspirin and clopidogrel
  • A person classified as a high-risk group according to the gastrointestinal risk assessment index
  • liver cirrhosis
  • known iron deficiency anemia
  • recent fibrinolytic therapy
  • active cancer
  • end-stage renal failure
  • life expectancy < 1 year
  • co-prescription of NSAIDs, corticosteroid and anticoagulant such as NOAC or warfarin
  • pregnancy
  • mentally or cognitively disabled people
  • mechanical ventilation with endotracheal intubation
  • Persons who do not agree to participate in the study
  • persons related unequally to investigators (students and employees)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

300 participants in 2 patient groups

proton pump inhibitor
Active Comparator group
Description:
1. medication : Lanston 2. capacity : 15mg 3. Number of times : QD 4. period : 6 month 5. Injection path : oral
Treatment:
Drug: Lansoprazole 15 mg
non-administered army
No Intervention group
Description:
No Intervention

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

DaeWon Kim, MD PhD; HaNa Lee

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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