Stratified Medicine of Eplerenone in Acute Myocardial Infarction or Injury and no Obstructive Coronary Arteries.
brief summary
Patients with heart attack or heart injury are tested (angiogram) for blockages in their arteries. Patients may develop heart problems caused by damage to small (microvascular) blood vessels. Eplerenone, a mineralocorticoid receptor-selective antagonist, reduces blood vessel injury and is used to treat high blood pressure and heart failure. Aim: to test the use of eplerenone in patients with heart attack/heart injury an no obstructive coronary arteries and small vessel problems (coronary microvascular dysfunction). Patients admitted to hospitals in the West of Scotland (2.5 million) and referred for invasive management to the Golden Jubilee and Hairmyres hospitals because of a suspected heart attack heart will be invited to participate into a registry-based clinical trial. Screening, enrolment and verbal, informed consent will be obtained during the angiogram then written consent on the ward. Small vessel disease will be assessed using a 'diagnostic' guidewire during the standard angiogram. People with small vessel problems will be invited to participate in a clinical trial of usual care or eplerenone. Coronary microvascular dysfunction is defined as an index of microvascular resistance ≥25. Coronary flow reserve (CFR abnormal \<2.0), microvascular resistance reserve ratio (MRR, abnormal \<2.5), and resistance reserve ratio (RRR abnormal \<2.0), measured simultaneously with IMR, are predefined parameters of interest. Patients will be allocated into one of the 3 groups: * Group 1: Patients without coronary microvascular dysfunction. No eplerenone * Group 2: Patient with coronary microvascular dysfunction. Usual care, no eplerenone. * Group 3: Small vessels abnormal. Eplerenone tablets. The primary outcome for the trial will be reduced heart injury (biomarkers) in patients with microvascular disease. We will also test heart function (MRI scan) at enrolment and at six months. All patients (Groups 1, 2 and 3) will have an angiogram. Standard blood tests will be collected during the hospital stay, and then again at 1 and 6 months. Other outcomes include questionnaires (health status). We will gather information on longer-term health outcomes (hospitalisation, death) using confidential electronic record linkage. We will ask for permission to store blood samples for future research. The research will improve scientific knowledge about eplerenone therapy in this patient group. The study will create a repository of clinical samples and images which will provide vital data for studies of endotypes of myocardial infarction or injury with no obstructive coronary arteries.
detailed description
Background: Myocardial infarction with non-obstructive coronary arteries (MINOCA) involves vascular dysfunction, prognosis is impaired and specific treatments are lacking. Mineralocorticoid antagonist (MRA) therapy attenuates left ventricular remodelling in patients with acute MI without heart failure e.g. REMINDER trial.
Stratified medicine is defined by the Medical Research Council Framework (2015) as the identification of key sub-groups of patients within a heterogeneous population; these being distinguishable groups with differing mechanisms of disease, or particular responses to treatments. Stratification can be used to improve mechanistic understanding of disease processes and enable: the identification of new targets for treatments; the development of biomarkers for disease risk, diagnosis, progression and response to treatment; and treatments to be tested and applied in the most appropriate patient groups.
Objective: To implement stratified medicine in MINOCA and nonischemic myocardial injury.
Primary Hypothesis of the registry-based diagnostic study: In patients with suspected MINOCA, elevated coronary microvascular resistance defined by index of microvascular resistance ≥25 mmHg·s, is common and quantifiable, identifying a clinically relevant endotype suitable for stratified care.
Primary hypothesis (Trial): In patients with an initial working diagnosis of MINOCA, early risk stratification by coronary microvascular dysfunction (index of microvascular resistance (IMR) ≥25) coupled with cardio-protective MRA therapy using eplerenone limits myocardial damage reflected by changes in N-terminal (NT)-pro hormone BNP (NT-proBNP).
Secondary hypotheses for predefined mechanistic, clinical and exploratory outcomes in the registry and nested, randomised trial will also be explored.
Overall aim: To undertake a developmental clinical study, clarify evidence-gaps and provide training in academic cardiology.
Design A prospective, registry-based, diagnostic study and nested, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint (PROBE) basket trial .
The registry involves a prospective diagnostic study with the aims of endotyping patients through a standardized protocol of invasive and non-invasive diagnostic evaluations. The nested randomized trial evaluates stratified therapy with eplerenone in patients with invasive evidence of coronary microvascular dysfunction, defined as IMR (≥25), and no demonstrable alternative non-ischemic etiology.
official title
The Effect of Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonist Therapy in Patients With Acute Myocardial Infection or Injury and no Obstructive Coronary Arteries: a Registry-based, Stratified-medicine, Randomized, Controlled Trial