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Hypotheses, rationale, design, and methods for prognostic evaluation of cardiac biomarker elevation after percutaneous and surgical revascularization in the absence of manifest myocardial infarction. A comparative analysis of biomarkers and cardiac magnetic resonance. The MASS-V Trial.
- Source :
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BMC cardiovascular disorders [BMC Cardiovasc Disord] 2012 Aug 16; Vol. 12, pp. 65. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 Aug 16. - Publication Year :
- 2012
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Abstract
- Background: Although the release of cardiac biomarkers after percutaneous (PCI) or surgical revascularization (CABG) is common, its prognostic significance is not known. Questions remain about the mechanisms and degree of correlation between the release, the volume of myocardial tissue loss, and the long-term significance. Delayed-enhancement of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) consistently quantifies areas of irreversible myocardial injury. To investigate the quantitative relationship between irreversible injury and cardiac biomarkers, we will evaluate the extent of irreversible injury in patients undergoing PCI and CABG and relate it to postprocedural modifications in cardiac biomarkers and long-term prognosis.<br />Methods/design: The study will include 150 patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD) with left ventricle ejection fraction (LVEF) and a formal indication for CABG; 50 patients will undergo CABG with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB); 50 patients with the same arterial and ventricular condition indicated for myocardial revascularization will undergo CABG without CPB; and another 50 patients with CAD and preserved ventricular function will undergo PCI using stents. All patients will undergo CMR before and after surgery or PCI. We will also evaluate the release of cardiac markers of necrosis immediately before and after each procedure. Primary outcome considered is overall death in a 5-year follow-up. Secondary outcomes are levels of CK-MB isoenzyme and I-Troponin in association with presence of myocardial fibrosis and systolic left ventricle dysfunction assessed by CMR.<br />Discussion: The MASS-V Trial aims to establish reliable values for parameters of enzyme markers of myocardial necrosis in the absence of manifest myocardial infarction after mechanical interventions. The establishments of these indices have diagnostic value and clinical prognosis and therefore require relevant and different therapeutic measures. In daily practice, the inappropriate use of these necrosis markers has led to misdiagnosis and therefore wrong treatment. The appearance of a more sensitive tool such as CMR provides an unprecedented diagnostic accuracy of myocardial damage when correlated with necrosis enzyme markers. We aim to correlate laboratory data with imaging, thereby establishing more refined data on the presence or absence of irreversible myocardial injury after the procedure, either percutaneous or surgical, and this, with or without the use of cardiopulmonary bypass.
- Subjects :
- Biomarkers blood
Chi-Square Distribution
Coronary Artery Bypass, Off-Pump adverse effects
Coronary Artery Disease blood
Coronary Artery Disease pathology
Coronary Artery Disease surgery
Fibrosis
Heart Diseases blood
Heart Diseases pathology
Heart Diseases physiopathology
Humans
Logistic Models
Multivariate Analysis
Necrosis
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention instrumentation
Predictive Value of Tests
Prospective Studies
Stents
Stroke Volume
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Up-Regulation
Ventricular Dysfunction, Left diagnosis
Ventricular Dysfunction, Left etiology
Ventricular Dysfunction, Left physiopathology
Ventricular Function, Left
Coronary Artery Bypass adverse effects
Coronary Artery Disease therapy
Creatine Kinase, MB Form blood
Heart Diseases diagnosis
Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine
Myocardium metabolism
Myocardium pathology
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects
Research Design
Troponin I blood
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1471-2261
- Volume :
- 12
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- BMC cardiovascular disorders
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 22898311
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2261-12-65