Premature Coronary Artery Disease in Women - Risk Factors and Prognosis
NCT ID: NCT00544739
Last Updated: 2012-01-18
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
670 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2005-04-30
2010-09-30
Brief Summary
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During last 10 years the rise in coronary artery disease (CAD) prevalence in younger women is observed. Emerging data suggest a unique risk profile in women (hypoestrogenemia with adverse effects of a protracted dysmetabolic state). The risk factors assessment and the risk factors profiles in women that are associated with CAD may be different than in men and thus merit reassessment.
Purpose The primary objective of this study is to determine characteristics and prognosis of women with premature coronary artery disease and to evaluate the extent of atherosclerosis
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Detailed Description
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Definition of premature CAD in women contained onset of coronary artery disease (myocardial infarction or coronary revascularization) before 55 years of age. Study participants are enrolled after coronary angiography and after identification and screening the age of admitted patients for acute coronary syndrome, stable angina or revascularization procedure. At the time of enrollment, participants give written informed consent for the study.
Information on demographic factors, social characterization, life style, education, anthropometric measurements, symptom characteristics and anamnesis, gynecologic history, family history on CVD and cancer, physical examination data, personal or family history of CVD, socioeconomic status, cardiovascular assessments and medication used was obtained through the use of a structured case report form questionnaire (CRF).
Additional fasting blood samples (15ml) are drawn from every individual (patients and controls) and frozen immediately at -70 for genetic study and in patients only half blood samples are centrifuged, separated, and frozen immediately at -70o after processing.
Baseline evaluation consisted of CRF data, and collection of coronary angiography, carotid ultrasonography and laboratory data.
The study protocol is approved by the Institutional Review Boards and Local Bioethics Committee.
* Follow-up All patients are contacted at 6 months after discharge from the hospital, and then every 6 months, for at least 4 years, to assess symptom status, menstrual status and occurrence of cardiovascular events (MACE) including death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, coronary revascularization, cardiac surgery and hospitalization for unstable angina.
* Study Endpoints
Primary Outcome Measures:
1. To evaluate the prevalence of atherosclerosis risk factors in women with premature CAD, including family history, social, environmental, clinical, traditional and novel risk factors, menopausal status and its association with early onset of the disease as compared to matched controls.
2. To evaluate the association of clinical factors to extent and advance of atherosclerosis
3. To evaluate predictive role of clinical factors and in particular: impaired fasting glucose, abdominal obesity, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, inflammatory markers, coexisting inflammatory and immunologic diseases on prognosis at 1 year and long-term follow-up in terms of MACE (cardiovascular death, nonfatal MI, revascularization, hospitalization due to heart failure III/IV or acute coronary syndrome)
Secondary Outcome Measures:
1. To evaluate predictive role of clinical factors and in particular: impaired fasting glucose, abdominal obesity, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, inflammatory markers, coexisting inflammatory and immunologic diseases on prognosis in terms of Vascular Events (MACE, hospitalization due to CAD progression, major arrhythmia, with ICD implantation, and stroke)
2. To evaluate predictive role of clinical factors and in particular: impaired fasting glucose, abdominal obesity, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, inflammatory markers, coexisting inflammatory and immunologic diseases on prognosis in terms of components of Vascular Events and total mortality
Endpoints assessment:
Independent endpoint classification committee comprising of 2 not involved into study procedures cardiologists will review documentation of the event and classify it.
The study may have significant implications for improvement, identification and management of female patients at risk of premature atherosclerosis providing more gender-specific data for efficacy and safety of cardiovascular medication. Better scientific recognition will result in better awareness of risk and effective prevention of coronary artery disease in young females, in optimizing the delivery of heart care to population of young women and rationale for guidelines specific for women.
Conditions
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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1
323 women with established coronary artery disease before 55 year of age
No interventions assigned to this group
2
347 clinically healthy, age matched women selected from the National Health Survey WOBASZ study with negative history of CVD or negative exertional chest pain.
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* agreement to participate the study
* Controls : age-matched healthy women selected from participants examined between 2004-2006 in the National Health Survey - WOBASZ study with negative history of exertional chest pain, angina, hospitalization of revascularization procedures or coronary treatment.
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
55 Years
FEMALE
Yes
Sponsors
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National Institute of Cardiology, Warsaw, Poland
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Barbara M Lubiszewska
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
National Institute of Cardiology, Warsaw, Poland
Locations
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Institute of Cardiology,
Warsaw, , Poland
Countries
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References
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Lubiszewska B, Kruk M, Broda G, Ksiezycka E, Piotrowski W, Kurjata P, Zielinski T, Ploski R. The impact of early menopause on risk of coronary artery disease (PREmature Coronary Artery Disease In Women--PRECADIW case-control study). Eur J Prev Cardiol. 2012 Feb;19(1):95-101. doi: 10.1177/1741826710394269. Epub 2011 Feb 21.
Lubiszewska B, Skora E, Kruk M, Broda G, Ksiezycka E, Kurjata P, Zielinski T, Ploski R. Prevalence of classical risk factors in Polish women with premature coronary artery disease. Kardiol Pol. 2010 Sep;68(9):1032-7.
Other Identifiers
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2 P05B 013 28
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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