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Browse 3,513 clinical trials for heart disease. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT07426107
This study employs a dual-cohort design to develop and validate a prognostic model for Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events (MACE) following revascularization in immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) patients with Coronary Artery Disease (CAD). The model will be developed and trained using a retrospective multi-center cohort (development/training cohort). Its performance will then be prospectively validated in a separate, consecutively enrolled prospective cohort (validation cohort). The goal is to create an AI-based tool to assist in personalized risk assessment and decision-making for this high-risk population.
NCT01311323
MILESTONE STUDY is dedicated to problems connected with patients with multivessel coronary artery disease and/or with left main narrowing who present symptoms of acute ischemia. For such kind of patients according to current ACC/AHA guidelines CABG (surgical revascularization) is recommended as a treatment method. In comparison with CABG, recent studies have shown that PCI (percutaneous coronary intervention) is associated with a lower rate of periprocedural adverse events and similar long term event-free survival in patients with left main disease. Our latest non randomized registry and randomized LEMANS study, comparing LMCA (left main coronary artery) stenting with CABG confirmed above findings. LEMANS ACS (acute coronary syndrome) retrospective registry of patients with UPLMCA (unprotected LMCA) disease and non ST elevation ACS showed lower 30 day and trend toward lower one year mortality after PCI when compared with CABG. It should be stressed, that acute ischemia substantially increase the risk of CABG. In fact, there are limited data on the outcome of ULMCA stenting or CABG in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS). Similarly, all randomized studies comparing PCI vs CABG in multivessel disease included mainly patients with stable angina, small cohort of patients with unstable angina and they excluded patients with non ST elevation Myocardial infarction. In the SYNTAX study -largest PCI vs CABG trial, randomized patients were patients with low perioperative risk (logistic EUROSCORE \<5) and ACS patients routinely excluded. High perioperative risk patients were included only in PCI registry.