Rationale and design of the effect of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist therapy in patients with acute myocardial infarction or injury and non-obstructive coronary arteries: A registry-based, stratified-medicine, randomised, controlled trial

Sykes, R. et al. (2023) Rationale and design of the effect of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist therapy in patients with acute myocardial infarction or injury and non-obstructive coronary arteries: A registry-based, stratified-medicine, randomised, controlled trial. British Society of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (BSCMR) 17th Annual Congress, Liverpool, UK, 11-12 Oct 2022. (doi: 10.1136/heartjnl-2022-BSCMR.26)

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Abstract

Background Myocardial infarction and non-obstructive coronary arteries (MINOCA) affects 1 in 9 patients with acute coronary syndrome. Vascular pathophysiology includes atherothrombosis and coronary vasomotion disorders. MINOCA has an unmet therapeutic need. Objectives To implement stratified medicine in patients with MINOCA by undertaking a prospective, registry-based, randomised, blinded end-point trial. Rationale There are no evidence-based, disease-modifying therapies for patients with MINOCA. Preventive therapy with antiplatelet drugs and statins is empirical. Coronary microvascular dysfunction, including increased microvascular resistance, impaired vasodilator reserve and vasospasm, is implicated in the pathogenesis of MINOCA. Targeted therapy may reduce myocardial injury, improve myocardial recovery and health status prospectively. The rationale is for a stratified medicine approach targeting microvascular dysfunction with eplerenone, a vasculoprotective mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, in MINOCA patients with coronary microvascular dysfunction. Design Following informed consent, 350 patients with MINOCA will be prospectively enrolled (NCT05198791) into a registry. Coronary microvascular function will be measured during invasive angiography. Eligible patients with one or more cardiovascular risk factors and elevated index of microvascular resistance (IMR ≥25) will be randomised to receive eplerenone or standard care (n = 150) in a prospective randomised open blinded end-point design. All patients will undergo the same assessments including cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) within two weeks of enrolment to establish a final diagnosis. Trial patients will also be invited to undergo repeat MRI with adenosine stress perfusion at six months. Primary outcome: Registry: the proportion of patients with MINOCA and IMR ≥25; Trial: Within-subject change in NT-proBNP at pre-defined measurement time-points: baseline, 1 and 6 months. Secondary outcomes Global hyperaemic myocardial blood flow (ml/min/g tissue); patient reported outcome measures and quality of life questionnaires; health-economics questionnaires, within-subject change in markers of collagen degradation as a marker of myocardial fibrosis vascular adhesion molecules as markers of vascular inflammation. Intravascular imaging with optical coherence tomography (OCT) will be undertaken in a sub-study (n=30). Participants will be invited to take part in a vascular sub-study, undergoing gluteal subcutaneous fat biopsy to isolate and characterise small resistance artery biology. Value Novel data on stratified medicine for MINOCA and eplerenone as potential disease-modifying therapy for this condition.

Item Type:Conference or Workshop Item
Additional Information:Abstract published in Heart 109(Suppl1): A20-A21.
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Robertson, Dr Keith and Good, Dr Richard and McCartney, Dr Peter and Mangion, Dr Kenneth and Bradley, Dr Conor and Morrow, Dr Andrew and Hood, Dr Stuart and Eteiba, Professor Hany and Ang, Dr Daniel and Sykes, Dr Robert and McConnachie, Professor Alex and Shaukat, Dr Aadil and Collison, Dr Damien and Apps, Dr Andrew and Watkins, Dr Stuart and Carberry, Dr Jaclyn and Berry, Professor Colin and Joshi, Dr Francis and Cleland, Professor John
Authors: Sykes, R., Morrow, A., Abouzaid, A. M., Ang, D., Apps, A., Bradley, C., Brogan, R., Carberry, J., Cleland, J., Collison, D., Eteiba, H., Ghattas, A., Good, R., Hood, S., Joshi, F., Lindsay, M., Mangion, K., McCartney, P., McConnachie, A., Robertson, K. E., Rocchiccioli, P., Shah, M., Shaukat, A., Watkins, S., and Berry, C.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Health
College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing
ISSN:1355-6037

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