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RECRUITING
NCT05781087

Predicting the Risk of Non-culprit Coronary Artery Disease After a Heart Attack

Sponsor: Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Heart attacks caused by the complete blockage of a heart artery are treated by opening it with a stent. However, most people will also have 'non-culprit' narrowings found in their other arteries at this time. Although in general people do better if these non-culprit narrowings are also treated with stents if they look severe, this process has problems. This is because narrowings that look severe may be stable and not cause any trouble. For these people a stent is a wasted procedure and unnecessary risk. On the other hand, narrowings that are currently left alone because they appear mild, may progress and cause a heart attack. Participants who have had a heart attack will have a scan from inside the heart arteries during an angiogram (optical coherence tomography, OCT) and a magnetic resonance angiogram (MRA). If the investigators can show that it is possible to accurately predict which non-culprit narrowings are going to progress and which are going to stabilise, medical professionals may be able to better target their treatments after a heart attack.

Official title: Optical Coherence Tomography With Magnetic Resonance Angiography to Assess STEMI Non-culprit Risk

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

90

Start Date

2023-04-25

Completion Date

2028-04

Last Updated

2024-09-25

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Optical coherence tomography and pressure wire assessment

Non-culprit coronary arteries

DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Cardiac magnetic resonance angiogram

1.5T

Locations (2)

St Thomas' Hospital

London, United Kingdom

King's College Hospital

London, United Kingdom