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Tundra lists 3 Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathies clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT07428031
French Registry: Late Gadolinium Enhancement in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
This study aims to create a registry of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a condition characterized by excessive thickening of the heart muscle. This disease can sometimes lead to serious complications. Currently, the prognosis of these patients is mainly determined by clinical and echocardiographic parameters. Detection of myocardial fibrosis using cardiac MRI enables better risk stratification for these patients.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-02-23
NCT06859827
Role of CMR-FT in Assessment of HCM and Athlete's Heart.
Using cardiac MRI feature tracking to asses myocardial motion differences in athlete's heart and discovered hypertrophic cardiomyopathy patients to increase diagnostic accuracy of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Gender: All
Ages: 20 Years - 50 Years
Updated: 2025-03-05
1 state
NCT06730464
Image-Based Prediction of Ventricular Tachycardia Events in Non-ischemic Cardiomyopathy
Risk stratification for sudden cardiac death (SCD) in patients with non-ischemic cardiomyopathy (NICM) remains suboptimal. Although current guidelines rely on severe left ventricular systolic dysfunction (left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) \< 35%) as key predictor of arrhythmic risk and clinical indication of prophylactic implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD), this approach seems inadequate, since registries report that only a minority of NICM ICD carriers experience an appropriate ICD shock during follow-up, whereas out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA) occur in patients with LVEF\>35% in up to 80% of cases. Moreover, pivotal primary prevention trials (DANISH trial, long-term outcome of the SCD-HeFT trial) failed to demonstrate a net mortality benefit of ICD in patients with NICM. As for most structural heart diseases (SHD), scar-related reentry has been addressed as the pathophysiological mechanism of ventricular arrhythmias (VAs) in patients with NICM, with fibrotic tissue being the substrate of this reentry. Late gadolinium enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) is the gold standard for the non-invasive visualization and characterization of the myocardial fibrosis and according to retrospective studies is detected in nearly 30% of patients with NICM. In latest years, several studies and subsequent metanalyses have explored the correlation between CMR-detected LGE and occurrence of VAs, showing that presence, extent, location (septal vs lateral) and patten (focal vs multifocal vs ring-like) of non-ischemic fibrosis help in stratifying arrhythmic risk. Nonetheless, scar heterogeneity (that is, inherent composition of dense scars vs border zone (BZ), presence of strands of viable myocardium within the scar) has been indicated as a potential novel predictor of VAs. In a recent prospective multicenter registry on patients with class I indication for cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) (\>60% with NICM), not only scar mass, but even border zone (BZ) mass and presence of BZ channels were identified as independent predictors for VT occurrence in NICM patients. This BZ mass and BZ channels can be automatically identified using a commercially available, post-processing imaging platform named ADAS 3D LV (ADAS3D Medical SL, Barcelona, Spain), with FDA 510(k) Clearance and CE Mark approval. Thus, CMR-derived BZ mass might be used as an automatically reproducible criterium to reclassify those patients with NICM at highest risk for developing VAs/SCD in a relatively short period of at least 2 years. In the present cohort study, the investigators sought to: i) evaluate the usefulness of CMR-derived BZ mass measurement and identification of heterogeneous tissue channels (HTC) (among other scar characteristics derived from image post-processing) to predict the occurrence of VT events in an international, retrospective, multicenter, unselected series of patients with NICM without previous arrhythmia evidence (main study); ii) subsequently validate these predictors of VT occurrence in a prospectively-collected multicenter cohort study (substudy 1); iii) retrospectively evaluate in the subset of patients with \> 1 LGE-CMR performed as part of standard clinical practice if any change in BZ mass and HTC presence occurs over time and if this correlates with occurrence of VAs (substudy 2).
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-12-12
4 states