The Current Status and Clinical Outcomes of Patients With Cardiogenic Shock II
NCT ID: NCT04143893
Last Updated: 2019-11-01
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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UNKNOWN
1000 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2019-05-30
2024-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Recent randomized controlled trial, IABP SHOCK II trial showed that use of IABP did not improve survival in CS patients complicating AMI. With the FDA approval of Impella in CS patients, a powerful new tool has become available for hemodynamic support. Impella is a transcatheter axial flow pump, delivered percutaneous, with the ability to provide 2.5 to 4.0 liters/minute of forward flow. In some countries where Impella is not available, extracorporeal membrane oxygenator (ECMO) has been widely used in patients with cardiac arrest or CS. ECMO is equipped with an oxygenator and may be more beneficial in the patients with cardiac and pulmonary failure. Impella is a more physiological device that does not compete with native blood flow. However, there is little data available to providers as to the best practice patterns associated with the delivery and use of mechanical circulatory devices in CS patients, furthermore, no data regarding CS patients originated by non-ischemic and post-cardiotomy situation as an etiology of cardiogenic shock.
Around 20 years ago, it is conducted CS registry and then, Cardshock registry launched in 2010 and enrolled only 219 patients. Well-designed large scale registries of CS patients are scarce. Recently, the investigators conducted retrospective and prospective registry of patient with cardiogenic shock (RESCUE I registry) and just finished to enroll 1247 patients from 12 centers in Korea between January 2014 and December 2018. ECMO device was used in 496 patients (40%) and IABP was used in 298 patients (24%). The registry is under analysis to investigate clinical characteristics and predictors of in-hospital mortality. The major weakness of RESCUE I registry are ;1) major proportion of the patients were enroll retrospectively, 2) the etiology of shock was not well defined, and most of enrolled population were of ischemic etiology, 3) the variables in the case record form was not systematically structured. Based on the RESCUE I registry, the investigators would like to launch RESCUE II registry as an prospective registry with well-defined subgroups of ischemic, myocardial, post-cardiotomy etiologies, and more systematically arranged variables based on prospective protocols or guidelines of management based on RESCUE I registry.
The investigators believe that the differences of races, management, and difference types of MCS can influence the outcomes of CS patients, but still there were no evidence. Mayo clinic is one of the top medical centers of excellence with experiences and science in the field of critically ill patients. The collaboration of Mayo Clinic team and RESCUE research team in Korea will be quite synergistic by sharing their knowledge and experience in the management and research in this filed.
The ultimate goal of RESCUE II is to develop the evidence-based medicine for the patients with cardiogenic shock by bringing experienced centers together across the 2 nations who are experts in mechanical circulatory support devices as well as the medical management in critically ill CS patients. The investigators aim to find optimal monitoring strategy, medical management, as well as best protocols for the application of mechanical circulatory support.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Cardiogenic shock with MCS
Patients with cardiogenic shock who underwent MCS
Mechanical circulatory support
Patients with cardiogenic shock who underwent MCS
Optimal medical treatment
Patients with cardiogenic shock who received optimal medical treatment including vasopressor
Cardiogenic shock without MCS
Patients with cardiogenic shock who did not undergo MCS
Optimal medical treatment
Patients with cardiogenic shock who received optimal medical treatment including vasopressor
Interventions
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Mechanical circulatory support
Patients with cardiogenic shock who underwent MCS
Optimal medical treatment
Patients with cardiogenic shock who received optimal medical treatment including vasopressor
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Cardiogenic shock is defined as the presence of the following:
1. Systolic blood pressure is less than 90mmHg for more than 30 minutes despite the fluid therapy, or the use of pressure boosting agents to maintain the systolic blood pressure more than 90 mmHg.
2. Peripheral hypoperfusion (cold skin, urine less than 30 cc per hour, impaired consciousness, lactate ≥2.0 mmol/l) or a person with pulmonary edema.
* Causes of cardiogenic shock include ischemic (acute myocardial infarction or ischemic cardiomyopathy, shock during cardiac intervention), myocardial (end-stage heart failure, myocarditis), post-cardiotomy shock, cardiac tamponade, or pulmonary thromboembolism.
* Those voluntarily consenting to the medical records and the data necessary for the study during the entire study period.
Exclusion Criteria
* Shock with unwitnessed cardiac arrest outside the hospital
* Severe non-cardiac morbidity with expected survival less than 6 months (malignancy, respiratory failure)
* Those who refused active treatment
19 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Samsung Medical Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Hyeon-Cheol Gwon
Professor
Principal Investigators
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Hyeon-Cheol Gwon, MD,PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Samsung Medical Center
Locations
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Samsung Medical Center
Seoul, , South Korea
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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RESCUEII
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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