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Tundra lists 3 Chronic Total Occlusion clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT06137521
Risk Factors and Outcomes in Coronary Chronic Total Occlusion
This study aims to assess the risk factors and evaluate the long-term outcomes of patients with coronary chronic total occlusion (CTO) treated with percutaneous coronary intervention or medical treatment.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-11-18
NCT05632653
CTO-PCI in Heart Failure Patients
The study investigates wheather CTO-PCI improves survival and heart failure related rehospitalization compared to optimal medical therapy (OMT). This hypothesis will be investigated within a large-scaled international, representative, prospective, randomized, controlled, open-label, event-driven, multicentre trial (trial acronym: CTO - Heart Failure) recruiting patients with planned CTO-PCI.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 90 Years
Updated: 2024-09-19
NCT06175377
Antiplatelet Therapy After Successful Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for Chronically Occluded Coronary Artery
Coronary arteries are in charge of oxygen supply for the myocardium. When coronary arteries develop stenosis the coronary blood flow (i.e. oxygen flow) is reduced. Chronic total occlusion (CTO) is the extreme evolution of a coronary stenosis, which ends up to a total vessel closure. Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is the main treatment for chronic occlusions. The principle of this treatment is to implant a stent covering the whole segment of occlusion and allowing the blood to perfuse the myocardium antegradely and not retrogradely via the collateral(s). This angioplasty and stent implantation requires a dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin associated with clopidogrel) to prevent a new thrombosis within the newly placed coronary stent. Following the development of coronary stent (and particularly drug eluting coronary stent) new thrombosis within the implanted coronary scaffold have emerged. Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) (compared to single antiplatelet therapy or anticoagulant) and initially prolonged DAPT (12 months) has offered a preventive treatment for stent thrombosis after PCI. PCI treatment for CTOs continues to increase in France and around the world, while no dedicated study has been proposed so far regarding DAPT duration. Therefore, the general European recommendations for DAPT in chronic coronary syndrome management guidelines should be applied even though the CTO poses specific technical challenges (long and multiple stenting length for example). Even if 6 months DAPT is recommended as routine duration in chronic coronary syndrome (CCS), longer DAPT (12 months) is possible in this setting. However, the optimal duration of DAPT is not clearly demonstrated on an individual basis and each physician must adapt the DAPT duration for each single patient. A so called "ischemic / bleeding balance "guides the duration of DAPT. This study would be the first randomized protocol to clarify the efficacy and safety of a shorter DAPT duration in the specific context of CTO PCI. It is conceivable that the technical advances which have made it possible to reduce the duration of DAPT to up to 1 month, in the cases of patients at high risk of bleeding for example, could be applicable to CTO PCI. Therefore, reducing the DAPT to 1 month, in the setting of CTO PCI, could reduce the haemorrhagic risk which should be proportional to the duration of the DAPT. Moreover, the invesitgators will evaluate the safety of short DAPT in terms of ischemic events during follow-up.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2023-12-18