pErsonalised Nocebo Assessment of Beta-blockEr Symptoms in Heart Failure
NCT ID: NCT07029906
Last Updated: 2025-06-19
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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RECRUITING
NA
150 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-04-29
2027-12-31
Brief Summary
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The primary aim of this study is to determine, for an individual, whether the adverse effects of beta-blockade in heart failure are genuine. Specifically, the objectives are:
1. To determine the proportion of a patient's symptoms that are due to taking beta-blocker tablets, and the proportion that are due to the expectation that the treatment will cause symptoms (the nocebo effect).
2. To determine whether, on average, symptoms are worse when taking beta-blocker compared to placebo tablets or no treatment.
3. To determine whether on average symptom intensity associated with beta-blockade decreases after receiving a report on how much of their symptoms are due to the beta-blocker.
Throughout the protocol participants report daily the intensity of the symptom that previously led to their beta-blocker cessation via a smartphone app. Participants will report weekly their adherence, general heart failure symptoms and quality of life. In this way the investigators will discover, for an individual patient, the proportion of their symptom that is due to the beta-blocker tablet, and whether knowing their personalised results helps them to restart beta-blocker tablets.
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Detailed Description
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ENABLE-HF is a prospective, N-of-1 randomised study of symptoms in participants with HFrEF. The study population will be patients who have an indication for oral beta-blockade due to HFrEF, and are currently not taking any beta-blockers licenced for HFrEF, having previously tried and stopped taking them due to perceived symptoms that they and/or their clinician(s) attributed to the beta-blocker(s).
Participants' suitability will be assessed by a detailed clinical history, clinical examination and review of their medical history to confirm the diagnosis of HFrEF, indication for beta-blocker therapy and that they are currently not taking it. The inclusion and exclusion criteria will be applied. At enrolment, a researcher will generate and allocate an unused randomisation code to the participant. This will also determine the contents of their 9 study bottles to be taken in Phase 2. The participant will then be provided with packs containing all phases' medications, and a smartphone if required.
The study protocol has three main phases:
(i) Phase 1 - a two week, open-label period of 2.5mg bisoprolol daily
(ii) Phase 2 - a nine week double blinded n-of-1 phase consisting of three separate weeks of daily bisoprolol 2.5mg, three separate weeks of daily matched placebo, and three separate weeks of no study tablet. The order of the nine weeks will be randomised at the outset.
(iii) Phase 3 - another two week, open-label period of 2.5mg bisoprolol daily.
Patients will report the intensity of the main symptom that led to them stopping beta-blocker tablets using a smartphone app daily. They will answer a weekly quality-of-life questionnaire. In this way the investigators will discover, for an individual patient, the proportion of their symptom that is due to the beta-blocker tablet, and whether knowing their personalised results helps them to restart beta-blocker tablets.
Each participant will receive a personalised report of their symptom scores from the n-of-1 Phase 2 period. At this point patients and researchers will be unblinded and patients will be counselled by a Cardiologist from research team about what these results mean and how much of their perceived side-effects are attributable to the beta-blocker. These findings will be delivered using pre-determined standardised language.
This study will develop a novel method to provide patients with HFrEF who are currently missing out on the prognostic benefits of beta-blockers with personalised information about their symptom aetiology. It is expected that getting these personalised results will improve long-term beta-blocker adherence in heart failure.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
SINGLE_GROUP
PREVENTION
TRIPLE
Study Groups
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Blinded bisoprolol tablets
The protocol includes a randomised, blinded nine week phase in which participants take either bisoprolol, no tablets or placebo. They will be randomly assigned to take three weeks in total of blinded bisoprolol tablets.
Bisoprolol 2.5 mg
Active bisoprolol 2.5mg tablets
Blinded placebo
Participants will be randomly assigned to take three weeks of blinded placebo tablets. They will be unaware as to whether they are consuming bisoprolol or placebo in this phase.
Placebo
Blinded placebo for a total of 3 weeks
No tablet
There will be three weeks in total during the randomised phase in which patients do not consume any tablets.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Bisoprolol 2.5 mg
Active bisoprolol 2.5mg tablets
Placebo
Blinded placebo for a total of 3 weeks
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Not currently taking beta-blocker tablets
* Previously tried one of beta-blocker tablet, and stopped taking it due to symptoms attributed to the beta-blocker
* Consenting to participate in the study
Exclusion Criteria
* Clinical contraindication to Bisoprolol including (but not limited to):
1. Asthma requiring BTS treatment step 3 or higher
2. Marked bradycardia (\<50 bpm)
3. Symptomatic hypotension (systolic BP \<85mmHg)
4. Metabolic acidosis
5. Phaeochromocytoma
6. 1st degree heart block with PR interval \>250ms
7. 2nd degree or complete heart block
8. Sick sinus syndrome
9. Acute pulmonary oedema
* Life expectancy \<1 year
* Patient refusal or inability to participate in the study
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Imperial College London
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Graham Cole, MB BChir
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Imperial College NHS Trust
Locations
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Imperial College London
London, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Barron AJ, Zaman N, Cole GD, Wensel R, Okonko DO, Francis DP. Systematic review of genuine versus spurious side-effects of beta-blockers in heart failure using placebo control: recommendations for patient information. Int J Cardiol. 2013 Oct 9;168(4):3572-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2013.05.068. Epub 2013 Jun 21.
Cole GD, Patel SJ, Zaman N, Barron AJ, Raphael CE, Mayet J, Francis DP. "Triple therapy" of heart failure with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, beta-blocker, and aldosterone antagonist may triple survival time: shouldn't we tell patients? JACC Heart Fail. 2014 Oct;2(5):545-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jchf.2014.04.012.
Zaman S, Zaman SS, Scholtes T, Shun-Shin MJ, Plymen CM, Francis DP, Cole GD. The mortality risk of deferring optimal medical therapy in heart failure: a systematic comparison against norms for surgical consent and patient information leaflets. Eur J Heart Fail. 2017 Nov;19(11):1401-1409. doi: 10.1002/ejhf.838. Epub 2017 Jun 8.
Related Links
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ENABLE-HF Website
Other Identifiers
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PG/22/10715
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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