In the present study, we aim to investigate the effects of dobutamine infusion and/or a single intravenous (IV) dose of the IL-6 antagonist Tocilizumab administered after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) presenting \< 24 hours from onset of chest pain and an intermediate to high risk of cardiogenic shock (CS) by assessment with the ORBI risk score (≥10 - not in overt shock at hospital admission). Plasma concentrations of pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (proBNP) as a proxy for development of cardiogenic shock (CS) and hemodynamic instability will be sampled for primary endpoint analysis. Effects on clinical parameters, mortality, morbidity as well as specific indicators of inflammation, cardiac function, and infarct size will secondarily be assessed noninvasively. The rationale behind the current study is that inflammatory and neurohormonal responses are associated with subclinical hemodynamic instability in patients with AMI with high risk of CS have worse outcomes. The potentially unstable condition may be targeted pharmacologically as an add-on to existing therapy. This is investigated in patients at elevated risk of CS by sampling biomarkers reflecting the inflammatory and neurohormonal responses, as well as determining effects on patient outcomes and infarct size.
The planned study is an investigator-initiated, randomized, double blinded clinical trial. Consecutive patients at Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet admitted with AMI \< 24 hours from chest pain will be screened. Patients eligible for trial inclusion will be randomized 2:2 to receive a continuous IV dobutamine infusion of 5 mcg/kg/minute versus placebo for 24 hours and to receive a single IV dose of tocilizumab (1-hour infusion) versus placebo administered after PCI. Treatment with the investigational drug will be initiated as soon as possible but no later than 2 hours after transfer to the coronary care unit (CCU) and after informed consent. All included patients will follow usual treatment according to current guidelines. The biomarker proBNP will be measured in blood samples drawn upon hospital admission in patients with ORBI risk score ≥10, and after 12, 24, 36 and 48 hours from admission. After treatment termination, 2D-echocardiography will be performed acutely and within 2 days to evaluate left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (cMRi) with late gadolinium enhancement technique prior to hospital discharge as close to 48 hours post-MI and after 3 months after discharge will be performed to calculate area at risk and salvage index after AMI.Blood samples (40 mL) will be obtained and stored in a biobank for subsequent measurement of biomarkers reflecting inflammation, neurohormonal activation, neuronal injury, connective tissue function and other relevant pathophysiological processes. These biomarkers will solely have research interest and no clinical implications. Furthermore, no genetic biomarkers and markers associated with malignancy development will be measured. Any leftover blood from the research biobank will be transferred to a biobank for future research and stored for up to 10 years solely for research purposes. After this period blood samples will be destroyed.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
100
Single bolus
Continous weight-adjusted infusion
Placebo comparator and diluent
Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital
Copenhagen, Denmark
ProBNP
ProBNP plasma concentration being assessed at multiple time points (including the primary endpoint) will be analyzed by application of a linear mixed model of covariance. As the biomarker will be measured prior to initiation of the study drug, the models will be baseline corrected (i.e., constrained linear mixed models, CLMM). The main result of these analyses will be the treatment-by-time interaction as a marker of whether the proBNP levels change differently over time in the treatment versus the placebo arm.
Time frame: 48 hours
CS and/or cardiac arrest
Number of patients developing in-hospital CS and/or in-hospital cardiac arrest
Time frame: Index admission
Acute Infarct Size
Magnetic-resonance imaging-estimated infarct size
Time frame: Admission
Post-infarction Salvaged Myocardium
Magnetic-resonance imaging-estimated infarct size
Time frame: 3 months
Additional biomarkers
Reflecting neurohormonal activation, endothelial function/damage, inflammation (pro- and anti-inflammatory processes - including IL-6 and C-reactive peptide (CRP)), connective tissue damage, organ dysfunction, and other relevant physiological processes
Time frame: Index admission
Post-procedure assessment
Survey of PCI operator's post-procedure clinical assessment of the patient's survival at discharge (yes/no)
Time frame: Index admission
Development of non-cardiac arrest arrythmia
Number of patients and number of per-patient episodes of sustained ventricular tachycardia or atrial fibrillation with a frequency above 120 for more than 30 minutes
Time frame: Index admission
2D echocardiographic measurements of hemodynamics
VTI and left ventricular function including strain measurements according to protocol
Time frame: Admisson, 3 months
Re-admission
Number of all cause and cardiovascular admissions during the first year after index hospitalization
Time frame: One year
Heart Quality of Life (HeartQoL)
Heart-specific Quality of Life Questionnaire
Time frame: Admission, 3 months
EuroQol Group EQ-5D Quality of Life (EQ-5D-5L)
Quality of Life Questionnaire
Time frame: Admission, 3 months
HADS (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale)
In-patient Anxiety and Depression Questionnaire
Time frame: Admission, 3 months
The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MOCA)
Clinician-administered Cognitive Test
Time frame: Admission, 3 months
Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS)
Clinician-administered Assessment
Time frame: Admission, 3 months
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