Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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TERMINATED
PHASE1
6 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-01-01
2018-03-13
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Post-operative atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common adverse event following CABG, experienced in 20-50% of patients; the highest incidence of AF occurs by the third post-operative day. Post-operative AF is associated with overall poorer prognosis resulting 4-fold increase in disabling stroke and cognitive impairment, 3-fold risk of cardiac-related death, and increased length of hospital stay. These risks are increased by the changing composition of the patient population over the last 10 years: patients are older and sicker, and are presenting with more complex disease states and co-morbidities, such as severe coronary artery disease (CAD), congestive heart failure (CHF), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), diabetes, previous cardiac surgeries with mechanical support device placements, and complex pharmacological histories. A higher prevalence of AF with increased transfusions among CPB patients has also been reported, suggesting a link with increased plasma load of inflammatory markers and mediators from transfused red cells. Reduction of AF by various drugs is moderately effective, but involves either rate control with beta blockers or rate conversion with amiodarone after the myocardial damage processes initiating AF have already occurred.
Decreasing the incidence of post-operative AF, and hence the morbidity and mortality of high-risk CABG patients, could be more fruitfully approached by targeting the upstream combined processes of inflammation and coagulation activation induced by the surgical insult and associated ischemia-reperfusion (I/R). During CPB, the heart is subjected to ischemic periods of varying duration. The cardiac tissue at that point is electrically resting and its metabolic demands are accordingly low. However, there is also a severely diminished supply of oxygen and nutrients. This results in slow but direct myocardium cellular damage, which increases as ischemia duration increases. However, after reperfusion with oxygenated blood, oxidative stress actually peaks because of accumulated oxidative substrates and cellular depletion of reductive compounds. Cardiac damage related to ischemia-reperfusion will be exacerbated in the presence of co-morbidities, such as diabetes and CAD, which are pathologies with a significant reactive oxygen species (ROS) injury component. High levels of ROS in the myocardium contribute to both electrical and structural remodeling of the cardiac muscle, resulting in the development of AF.
I/R-related oxidative stress and ROS activation contribute to cell damage by modifying protein DNA and phospholipids, resulting in lipid peroxidation and thiol-group oxidation, which in turn are linked to the induction of inflammatory cascades. Lipids are important small-molecule metabolites that have roles in a wide variety of physiological processes. The lipidome of eukaryotic cells contains thousands of lipid entities that structurally and chemically regulate cell membranes, store energy, or are precursors of bioactive metabolites. Defects in lipid regulation and metabolism are therefore significant contributors to disease pathophysiology. In particular, eicosanoids are lipid mediators linking coagulation and inflammatory pathways; intracellular oxidant species are essential mediators in eicosanoids synthesis pathways. Thus lipidomic analyses are a potential novel tool for the identification of drivers of underlying pathogenesis and new diagnostic biomarkers.
During CABG, total peroxide (TP) and oxidative stress index approximately double Increased post-bypass plasma levels of inflammatory markers such as C-reactive protein (CRP) and platelets and leukocyte activation have been observed during CPB. Increases in oxidative stress associated with CPB are correlated with a reduction in total plasma antioxidant capacity. These observations are of interest because an antioxidant is a molecule that inhibits the oxidation of other molecules. Oxidation is a chemical reaction that transfers electrons or hydrogen from a substance to an oxidizing agent. Oxidation reactions can produce free radicals. In turn, these radicals can start chain reactions. When the chain reaction occurs in a cell, it can cause damage or death to the cell. Antioxidants terminate these chain reactions by removing free radical intermediates, and inhibit other oxidation reactions by auto-oxidation; hence antioxidants are often reducing agents. The investigators propose that cell damage induced by oxidative stress and I/R injury could be prevented and/or inhibited by antioxidant supplementation. Specifically the investigators hypothesize that high-dose intravenous (IV) vitamin C supplementation will ameliorate ROS and therefore damp down upstream inflammatory processes, leading to a reduction of downstream adverse events with demonstrable links to inflammation processes, such as AF. Vitamin C is an viable therapeutic candidate because it is a powerful antioxidant with an excellent safety profile, and an emerging history of reducing inflammatory markers in both critically ill and traumatically injured patients. Scattered trials have indicated possible benefits of vitamin C in reducing incidence of post-CABG AF (see Literature search). An antioxidant such as vitamin C acts as a scavenger of intracellular oxidant species; as these are essential mediators in eicosanoids synthesis pathways, it is expected that vitamin C supplementation would decrease the thrombotic potential of eicosanoid-mediated pathways, such as the thromboxane (TBX) production pathway. Impaired cardiac blood flow and clot formation associated with AF contributes to congestive heart failure and stroke; therefore reduction of thrombotic potential is another essential feature for the proposed therapeutic agent.
The proposed pilot study described below represents a marked advance on previously-reported trials in that (a) study design is directed towards minimization of systemic bias, and (b) the investigators will perform simultaneous comparisons of multivariate inflammatory and coagulation profile changes over the immediate post-operative time period when inflammatory changes are expected to be at a maximum. The novelty of this approach is the systems-level analysis of lipids and their interacting moieties; new technology allows for rapid quantitative analysis of over 150 lipid mediators in a sample, time and cost effective manner.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
BASIC_SCIENCE
QUADRUPLE
Study Groups
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Vitamin C
Intravenous ascorbic acid 50 mg/kg in 50 mL normal saline every six hours for 48 hours.
Ascorbic Acid
Comparing safety and efficacy of IV Vitamin C in CABG patients
Normal saline
Intravenous normal saline 50 mL every six hours for 48 hours
Placebo
Placebo intervention
Interventions
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Ascorbic Acid
Comparing safety and efficacy of IV Vitamin C in CABG patients
Placebo
Placebo intervention
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Scheduled for elective non-emergent valve repair or replacement, or multi-vessel CABG surgery
* No known coagulopathy prior to surgery
Exclusion Criteria
* Ejection fraction \< 35%
* Presence of autoimmune disease or currently receiving immunosuppressant therapy
* History of renal calculi
* Renal dysfunction (pre-operative creatinine clearance \< 40 mL/min, or serum creatinine greater than 1.8 mg/dl)
* Known bleeding diathesis
* Active infection, cancer or tumor
* Prior history of atrial fibrillation
* Single CABG procedure (one involved coronary vessel)
* Prisoner
* Pregnant
18 Years
70 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Virginia Commonwealth University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Donald F Brophy, PharmD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Virginia Commonwealth University
Locations
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Virginia Commonwealth University Health System
Richmond, Virginia, United States
Countries
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References
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Quality AfHRa. HCUPnet: A tool for identifying, tracking, and analyzing national hospital statistics. In: Services DoHaH, ed. Rockville, MD2014.
Roger VL, Go AS, Lloyd-Jones DM, Benjamin EJ, Berry JD, Borden WB, Bravata DM, Dai S, Ford ES, Fox CS, Fullerton HJ, Gillespie C, Hailpern SM, Heit JA, Howard VJ, Kissela BM, Kittner SJ, Lackland DT, Lichtman JH, Lisabeth LD, Makuc DM, Marcus GM, Marelli A, Matchar DB, Moy CS, Mozaffarian D, Mussolino ME, Nichol G, Paynter NP, Soliman EZ, Sorlie PD, Sotoodehnia N, Turan TN, Virani SS, Wong ND, Woo D, Turner MB; American Heart Association Statistics Committee and Stroke Statistics Subcommittee. Executive summary: heart disease and stroke statistics--2012 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2012 Jan 3;125(1):188-97. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0b013e3182456d46. No abstract available.
Surgeons SoT. Adult Cardiac Surgery Database: Executive Summary: 10 Years. 2012; http://www.sts.org/sites/default/files/documents/2012%20-%20AC%20-%203rdHarvestExecutiveSummary.pdf. Accessed January 14, 2014.
Korantzopoulos P, Kolettis TM, Galaris D, Goudevenos JA. The role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis and perpetuation of atrial fibrillation. Int J Cardiol. 2007 Feb 7;115(2):135-43. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2006.04.026. Epub 2006 Jun 9.
Rodrigo R. Prevention of postoperative atrial fibrillation: novel and safe strategy based on the modulation of the antioxidant system. Front Physiol. 2012 Apr 12;3:93. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2012.00093. eCollection 2012.
Mariscalco G, Klersy C, Zanobini M, Banach M, Ferrarese S, Borsani P, Cantore C, Biglioli P, Sala A. Atrial fibrillation after isolated coronary surgery affects late survival. Circulation. 2008 Oct 14;118(16):1612-8. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.777789. Epub 2008 Sep 29.
Fukushima R, Yamazaki E. Vitamin C requirement in surgical patients. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2010 Nov;13(6):669-76. doi: 10.1097/MCO.0b013e32833e05bc.
Ferguson TB Jr, Coombs LP, Peterson ED; Society of Thoracic Surgeons National Adult Cardiac Surgery Database. Preoperative beta-blocker use and mortality and morbidity following CABG surgery in North America. JAMA. 2002 May 1;287(17):2221-7. doi: 10.1001/jama.287.17.2221.
Halonen J, Hakala T, Auvinen T, Karjalainen J, Turpeinen A, Uusaro A, Halonen P, Hartikainen J, Hippelainen M. Intravenous administration of metoprolol is more effective than oral administration in the prevention of atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery. Circulation. 2006 Jul 4;114(1 Suppl):I1-4. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.000851.
Wenk MR. The emerging field of lipidomics. Nat Rev Drug Discov. 2005 Jul;4(7):594-610. doi: 10.1038/nrd1776.
Kunt AS, Selek S, Celik H, Demir D, Erel O, Andac MH. Decrease of total antioxidant capacity during coronary artery bypass surgery. Mt Sinai J Med. 2006 Sep;73(5):777-83.
Larmann J, Theilmeier G. Inflammatory response to cardiac surgery: cardiopulmonary bypass versus non-cardiopulmonary bypass surgery. Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol. 2004 Sep;18(3):425-38. doi: 10.1016/j.bpa.2003.12.004.
Review Manager (RevMan) [computer program]. Version Version 5.2. Copenhagen: The Nordic Cochrane Centre; 2012.
Higgins JP, Altman DG, Gotzsche PC, Juni P, Moher D, Oxman AD, Savovic J, Schulz KF, Weeks L, Sterne JA; Cochrane Bias Methods Group; Cochrane Statistical Methods Group. The Cochrane Collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias in randomised trials. BMJ. 2011 Oct 18;343:d5928. doi: 10.1136/bmj.d5928.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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HM20000539
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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