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Showing 1-20 of 36 trials
NCT02186691
Long term survival of patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot is excellent (about 85% at 35 year-old). However these patients are exposed to residual pulmonary stenosis (PS) and/or pulmonary regurgitation (PR). It is well established that these lesions can lead to irreversible sequelae such as right ventricle dilatation and dysfunction. Pulmonary valve replacement technique was developed to avoid long term right ventricular dysfunction. Pulmonary valve replacement indications are based upon the presence of symptoms at exercise and/or morphological or functional parameters such as severe pulmonary regurgitation with right ventricle dilatation/dysfunction. The best timing of such intervention is still underdebate with the main aim of having the right balance between avoiding long term sequelae of PR or PS and being the latter possible to push ahead the need for new intervention. Recent publication showed that myocardial diffuse fibrosis can contribute to irreversible alteration of myocardial contractility. Quantification of diffuse fibrosis by magnetic resonance imaging is feasible and could help the physician to best determine the right timing for PVR in this population of patients. Cardiac function assessment at rest and during exercise is possible using MR and our centre has developed a program for cardiac exercise during MRI. This could help to detect infra clinic abnormality and to analyse myocardial adaptation during exercise.
NCT06932081
This real-world, international registry aims to evaluate the current experience with sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) in adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) patients by investigating the prescription patterns, safety, tolerability, and potential beneficial effects on heart failure-related outcomes.
NCT06771687
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a specific type of exercise training (high intensity interval training) can improve exercise capacity in people with a congenital heart defect that required the creation of a new connection between the right ventricle and pulmonary artery. This includes people with a truncus arteriosus, pulmonary atresia with a ventricular septal defect or severe tetralogy of Fallot. This study focuses on people aged 12 to 45 years. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Can a 12-week home-based high intensity interval exercise training program increase the exercise capacity? * Can factors that predict whether or not the exercise training program can increase the exercise capacity in specific people be identified? Researchers will compare the results from the intervention group to the control group. Participants will be assigned to one of these two groups at inclusion. The control group will also receive the intervention, after the control period. Participants will: * Participate in a 12-week home-based exercise training program (3x30 minutes a week, digitally supervised); * Attend 2 or 3 study visits (which partially is standard care) (2 visits for the intervention group, 3 visits for the control group); * Each study visit includes: echocardiography, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the heart, cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET), blood and feces sampling, and questionnaires on quality of life and physical activity.
NCT07295730
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if 3D-printed heart models and augmented reality can be useful modalities to teach medical students about congenital heart disease. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Does using 3D-printed heart models improve learners' understanding of congenital heart disease when compared to traditional slide-based teaching methods? 2. Does using augmented reality heart models improve learners' understanding of congenital heart disease when compared to traditional slide-based teaching methods? 3. How can these modalities best be integrated into standard medical school curricula? Participants will: 1. Take a pre-test consisting of questions regarding anatomy and physiology of the normal heart as well as two congenital heart diseases. 2. Be randomized into 3 groups that receive a teaching session using either slide-based lecture, 3D-printed models, or augmented reality. 3. Take a post-test of the same questions from the pre-test. 4. Take a delayed post-test of the same questions with additional subjective questions about their experience with their assigned modality.
NCT05186415
We propose the novel integration of two echocardiographic technologies - three-dimensional echocardiography using semi-automated right ventricular analysis coupled with the administration of ultrasound enhancing agents - to improve the inter-rater reliability and accuracy of various measures of right ventricular size and function, compared with cardiac MRI.
NCT04713657
Heart failure is a common long-term complication in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD). Medical treatments to promote regeneration of new healthy heart muscle cells have the potential to provide new heart failure treatments for these patients. The development of such therapies is limited by the poor understanding of the ways in which heart muscles grow after birth. Investigators have learned that humans without heart disease generate new heart muscles cells up to the age of 20 years old and that this is decreased in patients with congenital heart disease like Tetralogy of Fallot. Investigators are trying to determine if treatment with a medicine called Propranolol can increase heart muscle cell proliferation and, with that, normalize heart growth. Investigators will examine discarded heart muscle tissue that is obtained during surgery for the presence of new heart muscle cells. Propranolol is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat a certain kind of benign tumor in infants (hemangioma), but it is not currently approved by the FDA to increase heart muscle growth.
NCT05378386
This study will monitor device performance and outcomes in subjects undergoing implantation of the Edwards SAPIEN 3 Transcatheter Pulmonary Valve System with Alterra Adaptive Prestent in the post-approval setting
NCT04106479
Neonatal patients with congenital heart defects (CHD) have changing physiology in the context of transitional period. Patients with CHD are at risk of low perfusion status or abnormal pulmonary blood flow. Near infrared spectroscopy has been used in neonatal intensive care units (NICU) to measure end-organ perfusion. The investigator plan on monitoring newborns with CHD admitted to the NICU with NIRS and echocardiography during the first week of life and correlate measures of perfusion from Dopplers to cerebral and renal NIRS.
NCT00243776
The study team will use small pieces of human hearts which are removed as part of a required surgical procedure to study different objectives. One of the objective is how calcium ions pass through the membrane of heart cells in order to tell the heart cell how much force to contract with when the heart beats. Investigators will also study the proteins and RNA of these pieces to determine how the newborn heart cells control their force of contraction differently from adult heart cells. Investigators hypothesize that infant hearts have different regulation of calcium entry than adult hearts. The study team also wants to study combinations of 3D cardiac spheres with multiple environmental cues that can improve functional and metabolic maturation of Human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hPSC-CMs) and generate a more clinically relevant cell model.
NCT06668389
Repaired Tetralogy of Fallot (rTOF) is the leading cause of congenital cyanotic heart disease worldwide, involving up to 7-10% of congenital heart disease. With advances in open-heart surgical repair techniques and medical therapies, there is a significant increase in patients with rTOF surviving till late adulthood. One sequalae that nearly all rTOF patients develop during their lifetime is significant pulmonary regurgitation. Pulmonary regurgitation causes progressive right ventricular dilatation and systolic dysfunction, which in turn impairs cardio-pulmonary function and overall survival. There is currently no pharmacological therapy proven to improve cardio-pulmonary function in rTOF patients. In a double-blind, placebo controlled, randomized controlled trial involving 33 rTOF patients, the use of beta-adrenergic receptor blocker Bisoprolol failed to improve maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max) in the treatment group. Furthermore, there was no significant change in dimension of right ventricle on cardiac imaging, or heart failure biomarkers including brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP). In the APPROPRIATE trial involving 64 patients, angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) Ramipril similarly failed to improve VO2 max despite an improved right ventricular long-axis shortening. In REDEFINE trial, 95 rTOF patients were randomized in to receive angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) Losartan and control. At the end of study, there was no significant difference between the two groups in VO2 max, right ventricular ejection fraction, and other key outcomes. Sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor is a promising therapy for rTOF patients. Clinical trials consistently demonstrated that SGLT2 inhibitors reduce heart failure hospitalization and mortality among patients with heart failure with or without diabetes mellitus. There have been growing body of evidence that demonstrate that SGLT2 inhibitors improve right ventricular function. In a preclinical study of rat with pulmonary hypertension induced right ventricular failure, empagliflozin was found to reduce pulmonary pressure, alleviate right ventricular hypertrophy and reduce myocardial fibrosis. In a pilot study involving 10 patients with adult congenital heart disease and systemic right ventricular failure, SGLT2 inhibitors improved cardio-pulmonary function as reflected by 6-minute walk test performance and New York Heart Association functional status. Most recently, investigators from DAPA-SERVE randomized controlled trial reported that among 92 patients with systemic right ventricular failure, those randomized to receive SGLT2 inhibitors had superior systemic right ventricular function with larger fractional area change (FAC) and more negative free-wall global longitudinal strain. Nevertheless, as these trials involve patients with right ventricular connections to the systemic circulation rather than pulmonary circulation in rTOF, it is uncertain whether the trial results can be extrapolated to the rTOF population. The critical knowledge gap our proposed randomized controlled trial seeks to address is whether SGLT2 inhibitors improve cardio-pulmonary function in rTOF patients.
NCT05809310
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to identify the effects of percutaneous interventions for branch PA stenosis on exercise capacity in patients with d-TGA, ToF and TA. The main question\[s\] it aims to answer are: The primary study objective is to identify the effects of percutaneous interventions for branch PA stenosis on exercise capacity in patients with d-TGA, ToF and TA. The secondary objectives are 1) to assess the effects of percutaneous interventions for branch PA stenosis on RV function and 2) to define early markers for RV function and adaptation to improve timing of these interventions. Participants will undergo the same series of examinations at baseline and approximately 6 months follow-up (within 6 week time-range) as part of standard care: conventional transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE), cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) and conventional Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) including a low dose dobutamine stress MRI to assess RV functional reserve. The low dose dobutamine stress MRI will be performed in the interventional group from the UMC Utrecht/WKZ and Erasmus MC because the LUMC and AUMC do not have a suitable infrastructure for the low dose dobutamine stress MRI and this cannot be achieved throughout the duration of this study. The baseline CMR in the interventional group will be performed as close as possible prior to the intervention but maximal 4 weeks prior to the intervention. In addition, the intervention group will undergo standard RV pressure measurements during the intervention. Quality of life (QoL) questionnaires will be obtained at baseline and 2 weeks post intervention (intervention group) or a similar time range in the control group, which is based on experts opinion. TTE, CPET and conventional CMR will be performed within 2-4 years follow-up to assess the long-term effects of percutaneous PA interventions. Researchers will compare the difference in VO2 max (% predicted) between the interventional group (TGA, ToF or TA patients with a class II indication for a PA intervention who will undergo a percutaneous intervention for a PA stenosis) and the control group (TGA, ToF or TA patients with a class II indication for a PA intervention who will undergo conservative management)
NCT06768008
The purpose of this two-way cohort study was to explore whether an integrated prenatal and postnatal treatment model for neonates with critical congenital heart disease (CCHD) could be effective in avoiding preoperative morbidities, creating an ideal timing for surgery, thereby reducing postoperative in-hospital mortality, and improving surgical prognosis compared with the traditional model of care. In addition, in neonates with CCHD associated with the right cardiac system, the investigators aim to further investigate whether early postnatal cardiac surgery has the potential advantage of obtaining a time window for myocardial regeneration and thus improving myocardial remodeling. The aim of this study is to improve the diagnostic and therapeutic capacity of critical congenital heart disease and to promote the integrated prenatal-postnatal treatment model for clinical use. This will ultimately improve the quality of healthcare services for patients with cardiovascular diseases and lay the foundation for exploring guidelines for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases suitable for China's national conditions. The project will be jointly implemented by Beijing Anzhen Hospital , Capital Pediatric Research Institute, and 307 PLA General Hospital. Starting from January 1, 2022, the hospitals will continue to collect hospitalized cases of newborns with CCHD. The integrated prenatal and postnatal model is defined as a definitive diagnosis of CCHD in the fetal period (22-26 weeks), documentation of intrauterine transfer in our obstetrics department, subsequent initiation of an intrapartum or postpartum surgical plan after multidisciplinary consultation, and transfer to the pediatric heart center at the first hour of life, where the child is treated with either postpartum immediate or elective surgery, depending on patient status. For neonates who meet the indications for emergency surgery, surgery is performed immediately after birth. For neonates with non-emergency surgical indications, surgery is performed after birth adjustment to optimal status. The traditional model was defined as postpartum transfer via an outside hospital with routine interventions. The investigators then evaluate surgical prognosis and myocardial regenerative capacity to compare the effects of the two treatment models. This project will validate the advantages of an integrated prenatal and postnatal model over traditional models through real-world research and will improve prognosis in neonates with CCHD.
NCT05288894
The CMR/CT WG of the Italian pediatric cardiology society set up a multi-center observational clinical database of repaired-TOF evaluated. This registry will enroll prospectively patients evaluated by CMR for clinical indication in most of the CHD Italian centers. Data collection will include surgical history, clinical data, imaging data, and also adverse cardiac events for a period of 6 years.
NCT06081855
* To predict vulnerable patients for aortic root dilatation in TOF patients using CT as a reliable imaging modality, thus aiding early intervention, and identifying those who will require strict follow-up. * To assess the prevalence of TOF patients who developed aortic root dilatation, and those who were complicated with dissection, AR, and aneurysm, through collecting data from a large center (Aswan Heart Centre). * To investigate the relationship between age at repair and the diameter of aortic root.
NCT03634072
Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF) is the most common cyanotic congenital heart defect with the vast majority of survivors of corrective surgery left with some degree of right ventricular (RV) volume overload due to pulmonary regurgitation (PR) which cause RV enlargement with right heart failure, diminished biventricular function, ventricular arrhythmia, sudden death and decreased exercise performance over time. Pulmonary valve replacement (PVR) has been thought to ameliorate these complications but the timing of replacement has yet to be determined with equipoise at the moment in this decision making process. As nearly all studies in this regard are retrospective with much less data in pediatric TOF than adults, this pilot trial sets the stage to create a prospective randomized trial in the teenage years.
NCT05916976
Patient with Tetralogy of Fallot need live-long surveillance after initial operative correction (rTOF). MRI is an established and important component of the standardized follow-up in this patient population. A new score will be used to summarize the multitude of MRI-based parameters into a single number. Individual modificators are assigned to the components of the score. The value of each modificatory will be determined as a result of this feasibility trial. This new compound score is designed to anticipate any deterioration of cardiac function, arrhythmias or sudden cardiac death. This feasibility study is the first step to establish this score and find initial values for the modifies that are assigned to the more than 40 biomarkers from MRI, clinical examinations and serum parameters that are included in this new score.
NCT04208893
The investigators will explore the feasibility and safety of two exercise interventions delivered both in the hospital and in participants' homes. Preteens and adolescents who have had repaired Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF), will be grouped by age and randomly assigned to either an aerobic or strength training exercise program supervised for 12 weeks. An exploratory aim of this study will be to examine changes in fitness level, muscle strength, muscle oxygen extraction and quality of life after the intervention, and compare these measures between groups. At the end of the study, participants and parents will be interviewed to assess their satisfaction and ideas for improvements in the program.
NCT01762124
The purpose of this early feasibility study is to determine how a new transcatheter pulmonary valve will move and perform once implanted in the right ventricular outflow tract.
NCT04084132
Tetralogy of Fallot (ToF) is a congenital heart defect with four major features including right ventricular outflow tract obstruction. About 25 children are born with this condition in Denmark every year. Corrective surgery is usually performed within the first year. In 50 % of patients, enlargement with a patch is necessary to achieve relief of the outflow tract obstruction. This however results in severe pulmonary regurgitation, which eventually leads to volume overload, right ventricular dysfunction and arrhythmia. To avoid these late complications, pulmonary valve replacement with a prosthesis if performed when patients meet the current guideline criteria. Most patients meet the guideline criteria for revalving when they are between 20 and 30 years of age. The current guidelines however, are based solely on retrospective studies and novel research reveals that in more than 50 % of patients who are treated according to current practice, right ventricular volumes and function as well as exercise capacity and burden of arrhythmia do not normalize or improve. 500 patients with ToF will be enrolled in a multicentre, cross-sectional study, which will yield information about the long-term outcomes after initial repair of ToF, as well as suggestions about the optimal timing for re-valving. Among patients included in the cross-sectional study, 120 patients with free pulmonary regurgitation, will be randomized evenly for early or later re-valving with at least 10-years of follow-up, for evaluation of long-term efficacy and safety of early re-valving.
NCT03835494
In the presented study TDI will be used as a modern technique to characterize RV-function in Fallot patients at rest and during different exercise conditions.