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Active clinical trials for "Coronary Artery Disease"

Results 31-40 of 4926

Sirolimus-coated Balloon Versus Drug-eluting Stent in Native Coronary Vessels

Coronary Artery DiseaseCoronary Artery Stenosis

International, multicentric, prospective, investigator-driven, open-label, randomized (1:1) clinical trial to observe and evaluate the efficacy, of Magic Touch Sirolimus Coated Balloon (SCB) compared to one of the gold standard treatment for native vessel disease (everolimus-eluting stent, EES).

Recruiting24 enrollment criteria

The TransCatheter Valve and Vessels Trial

Aortic StenosisMulti Vessel Coronary Artery Disease4 more

The trial objective is to investigate whether Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR)-Guided Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) and TransCatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI) strategy for treatment of multivessel disease and aortic stenosis will be non-inferior to Coronary Artery By-pass Grafting (CABG) and Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement (SAVR) for a composite primary endpoint of all-cause mortality, stroke, myocardial infarction, coronary or valve re-intervention and life-threatening or disabling bleeding at one year.

Recruiting18 enrollment criteria

Modified T-Stenting With Szabo Technique Versus T-Stenting for Bifurcation Lesions in Coronary Heart...

Coronary Artery Disease

The study will compare clinical outcomes of modified T-stenting with Szabo technique with T-stenting for bifurcation lesions in coronary heart diseases.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

FFR Driven Complete Revascularization Versus Usual Care in NSTEMI Patients and Multivessel Disease...

Coronary Artery DiseaseNSTEMI - Non-ST Segment Elevation MI4 more

To compare FFR guided complete revascularization during the index procedure with usual care in non-STEMI patients with multivessel disease.

Recruiting16 enrollment criteria

HELIOS China Registry: Evaluation of the HELIOS Stent in a 'Real-World' Patient Population

Coronary Artery Disease

The study aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of biodegradable polymer sirolimus-eluting coronary stent system (HELIOS) in patients with coronary artery disease . The primary endpoint is target lesion failure, a composite endpoint of cardiac death, target vessel related myocardial infarction and clinically-driven target lesion revascularization at 1 year follow-up.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Functional Assessment In TAVI: FAITAVI

Coronary Artery DiseaseAortic Valve Stenosis

The aim of this study is to compare the clinical outcome of patients with severe aortic valve stenosis and associated significant coronary artery disease treated with TAVI and a percutaneous myocardial revascularization dictated according to two different strategies: the Angiographically-guided strategy; the Physiologically-guided strategy.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Liraglutide Effects on Epicardial Fat Inflammatory Genes

Type2 DiabetesCoronary Artery Disease

Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) is the visceral fat of the heart. EAT could locally affect the coronary arteries through local secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines. EAT plays a role in the development of the coronary artery disease (CAD). EAT is a highly enriched with genes involved in inflammation. Given its rapid metabolism and simple measurability, as first developed by Iacobellis, EAT serves as target for medications targeting the fat. Glucagon-like peptide-1 agonists (GLP-1A) are anti-diabetic medications with recently suggested cardio-protective properties. Liraglutide, a GLP-1A, has recently shown to reduce the cardiovascular risk. Iacobellis'group found that EAT thickness decreased by an unprecedented 36% after 12 weeks of treatment with liraglutide. Remarkably, Iacobellis'group found for the first time that human EAT express GLP-1 Receptor (GLP-1R). GLP-1A effects may be therefore visceral fat specific and target EAT. Based on these preliminary data, we hypothesize that treatment with liraglutide will significantly and rapidly reduce EAT inflammation. Decreased EAT inflammation can reduce the burden of the coronary plaques. We will test our hypothesis in a 12-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, interventional study in 40 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and CAD, with an acceptable glycemic control on their current diabetes regimen who require elective coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) regardless of their participation in the study. A minimum time frame of 4-week treatment will be considered to detect significant changes in the study endpoints. Inclusion criteria for body fat markers will rule out the confounding effect of different body fast distribution at baseline. Study subjects will be randomized in two groups of 20 patients to receive additional liraglutide or to remain on current treatment/ placebo prior to cardiac surgery. CAD subjects not allocated to liraglutide will be started on a supervised low calorie diet (LCD) to achieve approximately 5% of weight loss after from a minimum of 4 weeks up to 12 weeks to avoid the confounding effect of weight loss on the study outcomes. EAT samples will be collected during cardiac surgery and processed for analysis of mRNA and protein expression of EAT inflammatory genes such as Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha (TNF-α) and Interleukin 6 (IL-6), and GLP-1R.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Peer Support for Women With Heart Disease: Women@Heart

Coronary Heart DiseaseWomen's Health

Women with heart disease are more likely to die or suffer another cardiac event or stroke within 5 years of an index event compared to men. They are also more likely to suffer depression and report lower quality of life. Cardiac Rehabilitation programs have been designed to address these issues, but most women do not attend. Women indicate they have a greater need to talk about their experiences with heart disease and seek social support to help them cope. Peer support, the assistance provided by other women with a similar illness experience, may be one way to enhance social support for women with heart disease and help them improve their psychosocial well-being. The Investigators have developed a peer support program called Women@Heart (W@H). The program is led by trained peer leaders (women who themselves have made a successful recovery from a heart event). A pilot test of the program showed promising results. The Investigators now need to conduct a more rigorous evaluation of the program. The main objective of this project is to determine if the W@H program helps women to improve their psychosocial well-being compared to being on a waiting list to participate in the program. It will also examine the effect of the program on: health behaviours (tobacco smoking, physical activity, sedentary behaviour, fruit and vegetable consumption, and medication adherence); coronary risk factors; and clinical outcomes (re-hospitalization, health care system use, death).

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Comparison of Vessel-FFR Versus FFR in Intermediate Coronary Stenoses

Coronary Artery DiseaseCoronary Artery Stenoses

This is a prospective, randomized, controlled, multicenter, open-label study designed to assess whether vFFR is non-inferior to FFR in assessment of intermediate coronary stenosis in terms of the occurrence of MACE during 12 months after randomization.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Cytisine Compared to Combination NRT in Relapsed Smokers

Smoking CessationCoronary Artery Disease

Cigarette smoking causes cardiovascular disease (CVD) yet many smokers with CVD are unable to quit despite strong desire to do so. Within 90 days of discharge, about 30% of smokers have returned to daily smoking and almost 60% have relapsed by 1 year. Patients with CVD who resume smoking are more likely to experience new events (e.g. heart attack or stroke) or die. New approaches are required. A new type of cessation product is a plant-based medication called Cytisine. Cytisine is taken orally over 25 days and reduces the pleasurable sensations that smokers get from cigarettes and reduces withdrawal symptoms. The primary research question is whether or not it is feasible to conduct a large-scale trial of the effectiveness of this product compared to conventional nicotine replacement therapy in smokers who have failed to quit using conventional methods. To determine feasibility, a pilot study will be conducted of sixty smokers (30 men, 30 women) with CVD who have been treated for smoking cessation but have relapsed within 90 days of discharge. Participants will complete a baseline assessment and will be randomly assigned to either the combination nicotine replacement therapy group (patch plus lozenge) or cytisine group. Participants will be treated for 25 days and then will return to UOHI so adherence to treatment and smoking status can be assessed. Feasibility of the larger trial will be based on: the recruitment rates; adherence to assigned treatments; dropout rates; and differences in 25-day quit rates between groups.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria
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