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WISE CVD - Continuation (WISE HFpEF)
Sponsor: Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Summary
The Women's Ischemia Study Evaluation (WISE), a cohort study of over 1000 women, has made many contributions to the understanding of cardiovascular disease. A milestone acknowledged in the 2011 AHA Herrick Lecture is the role of Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction (CMD) in women with symptoms/signs of ischemia without obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). While in 1996, CMD was considered "an imaging artifact", in 2013, it is a widely accepted as a pathophysiologic process requiring systematic cohesive scientific pursuit. CMD is prevalent, associated with adverse clinical outcomes, poor quality of life and healthcare costs rivaling obstructive CAD. There are 2-3 million US women with CMD, and 100,000 new cases projected annually placing CMD prevalence, morbidity and costs higher than all female reproductive cancers combined. Among women with ischemia, preserved ejection fraction and no obstructive CAD, it has been observed that there are relatively more new onset heart failure (HF) hospitalizations than nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI). It has been hypothesized that CMD contributes to left ventricular (LV) diastolic dysfunction and subsequent heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Preliminary data further suggests that left ventricular diastolic dysfunction is linked to CMD via a mechanism of augmentation and/or perpetuation by cardiomyocyte fat accumulation. HFpEF is prevalent in women and older men, but poorly understood. Mechanistic understanding is critical to HFpEF intervention and guideline development. The study hypotheses are as follows: 1. Risk factor conditions (hypertension, dyslipidemia, dysglycemia, loss of estrogen) promote an inflammatory and pro-oxidative state making the microvasculature vulnerable; 2. Vulnerable coronary microvasculature becomes dysregulated (sympathetic nervous system activation, endothelial dysfunction, changes in vascular smooth muscle activation, spasm) causing repeated episodes of transient ischemia; 3. Repeated ischemia-reperfusion episodes facilitate preconditioning with preservation of cardiomyocyte contractile and microvascular function against ischemic injury; 4. Ischemia-reperfusion and preconditioning lead to cardiomyocyte fat accumulation and relaxation impairment resulting in diastolic dysfunction and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF).
Official title: Women's Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation (WISE) - Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction (CMD) and Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction (HFpEF)
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
220
Start Date
2015-11
Completion Date
2030-02
Last Updated
2025-07-24
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Coronary Angiography
A coronary angiogram is a procedure that uses x-ray imaging to see the heart's blood vessels; it is a part of Heart (cardiac) catheterization procedure. During a coronary angiogram, a type of dye that's visible by an x-ray machine is injected into the blood vessels of the heart. The x-ray machine rapidly takes a series of images (angiograms). The Coronary Reactivity test (CRT), heart pressure (Millar) evaluation, and Millar stress testing are performed during the coronary angiography.
Coronary Reactivity Testing
An angiography procedure specifically designed to examine the blood vessels in the heart and how they respond to different medications.
Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Noninvasive high resolution imaging test; Optimized magnetic resonance imaging technique for use in the cardiovascular system - use of ECG gating and rapid imaging sequences. Handgrip, mild leg exercise, and brief Valsalva Maneuver will be conducted to characterize cardiac response to stress. The CMRA is performed as part of the CMRI.
Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Angiography
Test for validation purposes against gold-standard Angiography. CMRA is a part of the CMRI test. The residual contrast (gadolinium) circulating in the blood stream (following the CMRI prior images) is sufficient for CMRA evaluation.
Computed Coronary Tomographic Angiography
Noninvasive, imaging method that uses a computed tomography (CT) scanner to look at the structures and blood vessels of the heart.
Rest-Stress Millar Testing
Handgrip, mild leg exercise, and brief Valsalva Maneuver will be conducted to characterize cardiac response to stress. They are designed to test how your heart muscle is functioning. Rest-stress Millar testing is performed during the coronary angiography and Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
Aortic vasorelaxation tests
Non-invasive clinical test. Repeat blood pressure and heart rate per minute will be read for three times; Your pulse wave velocity, pulse wave analysis and central pressure measurements will be recorded.
Locations (1)
Cedars-Sinai Women's Heart Center
Los Angeles, California, United States