RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT05532631

Percutaneous Coronary RevascularizatiOn VERsus Coronary-Artery Bypass Grafting for Multivessel Disease in Patients With Left Ventricular Dysfunction (PROVERB)


Sponsor

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris

Enrollment

1,040 participants

Start Date

Mar 16, 2023

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

A short description, 5000 characters Ischemic cardiomyopathy related to coronary artery disease is currently the leading cause of heart failure. When it is responsible for heart failure, the coronary artery disease likely involves 2 or 3 vessels. Percutaneous coronary angioplasty, which is the other available technique for coronary revascularization, has never been evaluated in this indication. The results of retrospective registries studying the strategy for multivessel revascularization in patients with heart failure are inconsistent and no randomized study has been performed so far. Currently, ESC guidelines recommends to perform coronary-artery bypass grafting (IB) or percutaneous coronary intervention (IIa C) with the acknowledgement that percutaneous coronary intervention has never been properly evaluated in this setting. However, it has been previously demonstrated that left ventricle dysfunction significantly increases mortality and morbidity during and after cardiac surgery (3-10% mortality when LVEF is ≤30%). Moreover, the technical progresses in stent development and manufacturing have led to a dramatic decrease in the incidence of stent thrombosis and in-stent restenosis. Therefore, we hypothesize that percutaneous coronary angioplasty may be an attractive strategy for revascularization in patients with multi-vessel disease and left ventricle dysfunction, who are at high risk of surgical complication. Thus, we aim to test the hypothesis that percutaneous coronary intervention is non-inferior to coronary-artery bypass grafting for revascularization in patients with multivessel disease and left ventricle dysfunction. The main objective is to demonstrate that percutaneous coronary angioplasty is non-inferior to coronary-artery bypass grafting for multivessel revascularization in patients with left ventricular dysfunction on major cardiac and cerebrovascular events (MACCE). Method:A Prospective Randomized Open label, Blinded Endpoint, parallel-group, active controlled, non-inferiority, multicenter trial.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is comparing two ways to open up blocked coronary arteries in people with severely weakened hearts and multiple blocked vessels: a catheter-based procedure (PCI, also called angioplasty/stenting) versus open-heart bypass surgery (CABG). The question is which approach leads to better outcomes in this high-risk group. **You may be eligible if...** - You are 18 or older - Your heart's pumping strength (ejection fraction) is 35% or less - You have multiple blocked coronary arteries (three-vessel disease, or two-vessel disease including a critical artery) - Both PCI and bypass surgery are technically possible, as agreed by your heart care team - You have health insurance and can commit to at least 2 years of follow-up **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You have had prior bypass surgery or a stent placed in the last 6 months - You are in cardiogenic shock (critically low blood pressure) - You have had a heart attack in the last 30 days - You have another life-threatening illness with less than 2 years expected survival - You also need another heart surgery (e.g., valve repair) Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This is a simplified summary. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

PROCEDUREPercutaneous coronary intervention

The studied intervention will be percutaneous coronary angioplasty with drug eluting stent implantation. Percutaneous coronary intervention may be performed during one single procedure or during staged procedures. The decision will be left at the investigator choice. PCI will be performed using drug eluting stent exclusively. The techniques for bifurcation lesions and chronic total occlusion angioplasty will be left at the operator choice. The choice of the drug eluting stent used will be left at the operator's choice. Anti-platelet therapy will be given to all patients randomized to PCI. The choice of the anti-thrombotic regiment and its duration will be left at the investigator choice (after assessment of initial presentation, bleeding and ischemic risks) but will have to comply with the European Society of Cardiology guidelines.

PROCEDURECoronary artery bypass grafting

Coronary artery bypass grafting technique will be total arterial revascularization unless internal mammary grafts are unavailable or have inadequate flow. All patients will be treated with anti-thrombotic therapy according to the European Society of Cardiology guidelines


Locations(1)

Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris - CHU HENRI MONDOR

Créteil, Val De Marne, France

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NCT05532631


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