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RECRUITING
NCT03588286
NA

Programmed Ventricular Stimulation to Risk Stratify for Early Cardioverter-Defibrillator (ICD) Implantation to Prevent Tachyarrhythmias Following Acute Myocardial Infarction (PROTECT-ICD)

Sponsor: Western Sydney Local Health District

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The PROTECT-ICD trial is a physician-led, multi-centre randomised controlled trial targeting prevention of sudden cardiac death in patients who have poor cardiac function following a myocardial infarct (MI). The trial aims to assess the role of electrophysiology study (EPS) in guiding implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) implantation, in patients early following MI (first 40 days). The secondary aim is to assess the utility of cardiac MRI (CMR) in analysing cardiac function and viability as well as predicting inducible and spontaneous ventricular tachyarrhythmia when performed early post MI. Following a MI patients are at high risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD). The risk is highest in the first 40 days; however, current guidelines exclude patients from receiving an ICD during this time. This limitation is based largely on a single study, The Defibrillator in Acute Myocardial Infarction Trial (DINAMIT), which failed to demonstrate a benefit of early ICD implantation. However, this study was underpowered and used non-invasive tests to identify patients at high risk. EPS identifies patients with the substrate for re-entrant tachyarrhythmia, and has been found in multiple studies to predict patients at risk of SCD. Contrast-enhanced CMR is a non-invasive test without radiation exposure which can be used to assess left ventricular function. In addition, it provides information on myocardial viability, scar size and tissue heterogeneity. It has an emerging role as a predictor of mortality and spontaneous ventricular arrhythmia in patients with a previous MI. A total of 1,058 patients who are at high risk of SCD based on poor cardiac function (left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) ≤40%) following a ST-elevation or non-STE myocardial infarct will be enrolled in the trial. Patients will be randomised 1:1 to either the intervention or control arm. In the intervention arm all patients undergo early EPS. Patients with a positive study (inducible ventricular tachycardia cycle length ≥200ms) receive an ICD, while patients with a negative study (inducible ventricular fibrillation or no inducible VT) are discharged without an ICD, regardless of the LVEF. In the control arm patients are treated according to standard local practice. This involves early discharge and repeat assessment of cardiac function after 40 days or after 90 days following revascularisation (PCI or CABG). ICD implantation after 40 days according to current guidelines (LVEF≤30%, or ≤35% with New York Heart Association (NYHA) class II/III symptoms) could be considered, if part of local standard practice, however the ICD is not funded by the trial. A proportion of trial patients from both the intervention and control arms at \>48 hours following MI will undergo CMR to enable correlation with (1) inducible VT at EPS and (2) SCD and non-fatal arrhythmia on follow up. It will be used to simultaneously assess left ventricular function, ventricular strain, myocardial infarction size, and peri-infarction injury. The size of the infarct core, infarct gray zone (as a measure of tissue heterogeneity) and total infarct size will be quantified for each patient. All patients will be followed for 2 years with a combined primary endpoint of non-fatal arrhythmia and SCD. Non-fatal arrhythmia includes resuscitated cardiac arrest, sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) and ventricular fibrillation (VF) in participants without an ICD. Secondary endpoints will include all-cause mortality, non-sudden cardiovascular death, non-fatal repeat MI, heart failure and inappropriate ICD denial. Secondary endpoints for CMR correlation will include (1) the presence or absence of inducible VT at EP study, and (2) combined endpoint of appropriate ICD activation or SCD at follow up. It is anticipated that the intervention arm will reduce the primary endpoint as a result of prevention of a) early sudden cardiac deaths/cardiac arrest, and b) sudden cardiac death/cardiac arrest in patients with a LVEF of 31-40%. It is expected that the 2-year primary endpoint rate will be reduced from 6.7% in the control arm to 2.8% in the intervention arm with a relative risk reduction (RRR) of 68%. A two-group chi-squared test with a 0.05 two-sided significance level will have 80% power to detect the difference between a Group 1 proportion of 0.028 experiencing the primary endpoint and a Group 2 proportion of 0.067 experiencing the primary endpoint when the sample size in each group is 470. Assuming 1% crossover and 10% loss to follow up the required sample size is 1,058 (n=529 patients per arm). To test the hypothesis that tissue heterogeneity at CMR predicts both inducible and spontaneous ventricular tachyarrhythmias will require a sample size of 400 patients to undergo CMR. It is anticipated that the use of EPS will select a group of patients who will benefit from an ICD soon after a MI. This has the potential to change clinical guidelines and save a large number of lives.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 85 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

1058

Start Date

2014-02-27

Completion Date

2029-12-06

Last Updated

2024-05-07

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Electrophysiology study (EPS)

EPS will be performed in all patients in the intervention arm with programmed ventricular stimulation with a drive train of 8 beats at 400 ms with up to 4 extrastimuli and stimulation from the right ventricular apex with current delivered at twice pacing threshold. The end point for stimulation will be sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia (VT) lasting \> 10 seconds. If sustained monomorphic VT with cycle length (CL) ≥200ms is induced by ≤4 extra stimuli the EPS result will be considered positive for inducible VT.30 Ventricular fibrillation or flutter with CL\<200ms will be considered a negative result. The Programmed Ventricular Stimulation (PVS) induction will be repeated a second time if the initial induction was negative for VT.

OTHER

Standard Care

The control group receive ongoing standard care according to the practise of their institution. This includes discharge from hospital as per their treating physician and follow up as usual in the community. Participants in this group would be eligible to receive an ICD according to the standard practise of their cardiologist (guideline recommendations are after 40 days following myocardial infarction or 90 days following revascularisation only in patients with left ventricular ejection fraction less than or equal to 30% or less than or equal to 35% in the presence of heart failure).

PROCEDURE

Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR)

CMR will be performed on either a 1.5-T or 3-T scanner. Gadolinium contrast (Gd-BOPTA, MultihanceTM) will be administered for quantification myocardial perfusion imaging with subsequent late gadolinium enhanced imaging after a total dose of 0.1mmol/kg. Exclusion criteria specific for CMR will include pregnancy, renal insufficiency defined as glomerular filtration rate (GFR) \<30 mL/min, contraindication to MRI (including non-MRI compatible pacemaker/ICD or metal implants, non-MR safe prosthetic heart valves), claustrophobia which cannot be controlled via standard methods (benzodiazepines and/or sedative antihistamine administration) and prior allergic reaction to gadolinium-based contrast agent.

Locations (52)

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Canberra Hospital

Garran, Australian Capital Territory, Australia

Nepean Hospital

Kingswood, New South Wales, Australia

John Hunter Hospital

New Lambton Heights, New South Wales, Australia

Prince of Wales Hospital

Randwick, New South Wales, Australia

Royal North Shore Hospital

Saint Leonards, New South Wales, Australia

Westmead Hospital

Westmead, New South Wales, Australia

Wollongong Hospital

Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia

Sunshine Coast University Hospital

Birtinya, Queensland, Australia

Carins Hospital

Cairns, Queensland, Australia

The Prince Charles Hospital

Chermside, Queensland, Australia

The Townsville Hospital

Douglas, Queensland, Australia

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

Herston, Queensland, Australia

Gold Coast University Hospital

Southport, Queensland, Australia

Princess Alexandra Hospital

Woolloongabba, Queensland, Australia

Lyell McEwin Hospital

Elizabeth Vale, South Australia, Australia

MonashHeart

Clayton, Victoria, Australia

Northern Hospital

Epping, Victoria, Australia

Austin Hospital

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Western Health, Sunshine and Footscray Hospitals

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine

Prague, Czechia

Cardiovascular Center Bad Neustadt

Bad Neustadt an der Saale, Germany

Klinikum Brandenburg

Brandenburg, Germany

Universitaetsmedizin Gittingen (University of Göttingen Medical Center)

Göttingen, Germany

Leipzig Heart Center

Leipzig, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Leipzig

Leipzig, Germany

General Hospital of Athens Giorgios Gennimatas

Athens, Greece

General Hospital of Athens Ippokrateio

Athens, Greece

University Hospital of Heraklion Crete

Heraklion, Greece

Semmelweis University Heart and Vascular Center

Budapest, Hungary

University of Debrecen

Debrecen, Hungary

University of Pécs

Pécs, Hungary

Sharee Zadek Medical Centre

Jerusalem, Israel

Paul Stradins University Clinic

Riga, Latvia

Institut Jantung Negara Sdn Bhd

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Pusat Jantung Sarawak (PJS)(Sarawak Heart Centre)

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Auckland City Hospital

Grafton, Auckland, New Zealand

Middlemore Hospital

Otahuhu, Auckland, New Zealand

Waikato Hospital

Hamilton W., Hamilton, New Zealand

Christchurch Hospital

Christchurch, New Zealand

Wellington Hospital

Wellington, New Zealand

Medical University of Łódź - Biegański Provincial Specialist Hospital

Lodz, Poland

Medical University of Łódź - WAM Hospital

Lodz, Poland

Medical University of Łódź

Lodz, Poland

National Institute of Cardiology Warsaw

Warsaw, Poland

Almazov National Medical Research Centre

Saint Petersburg, Russia

Samara State Medical University

Samara, Russia

National University Heart Centre, Singapore (NUHCS)

Singapore, Singapore

The National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases

Bratislava, Slovakia

University Hospital Basel

Basel, Switzerland

University Hospital Bern

Bern, Switzerland

Lausanne University Hospital

Lausanne, Switzerland