ACC 2022: Late-breaking Science Video Collection
Published: 05 April 2022
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Views:
3088
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Likes:
7
Overview
Full programme
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Views:
3088
-
Likes:
7
ACC 22: Results from the GIPS-IV Trial
- ACC 22: Findings from the VALOR-HCM Trial
- ACC 22: MAVA-LTE Shows Improvement in NYHA Class in Patients Treated with Mavacamten
- ACC 22: Results From the PACIFIC AF Trial
- ACC 22: FAME 3 Suggests CABG Outperforms FFR-Guided PCI in Patients with Multivessel Disease
- ACC 22: Results from the TRANSLATE-TIMI 70 Trial
- ACC 22: Results from the POISE-3 Trial
- ACC 22: ICD Shock Therapies and the Burden of Ventricular Tachycardia
- ACC 22: PACMAN-AMI Shows Reduced Plaque Regression in AMI Patients Treated with Alirocumab
- ACC 22: Magnitude & Duration of Effects of a siRNA Targeting Lp(a)
- ACC 22: Results From a sub-study of the POISE-3 Trial
- ACC 22: Findings from the CoreValve US Pivotal & SURTAVI Trials
- ACC 22: ADAPT-TAVR Shows SLT Does Not Affect CO for Patients After TAVR
- ACC 22: Results From the Chocolate-Touch Study
- ACC 22: Results from the GIPS-IV Trial
- ACC 22: FFR vs. IVUS-guided PCI in Intermediate Coronary Artery Stenosis: The FLAVOUR Trial
- ACC 22: Results From the EMPULSE Study – Empagliflozin Proves Beneficial for Patients With HF
- ACC 22: Secondary Analysis of CANTOS Finds LDL & HDL Predict Residual Risk of Atherosclerotic Events
- ACC 22: 3-year Efficacy Outcomes from the SPYRAL HTN-ON MED Med Pilot Study
- 2022 AHA/ACC/HFSA Guideline for HF Management: Highlights & Implementation
Overview
Our regular review series View from the Thoraxcenter hosted by Prof Nicolas Van Mieghem and Dr Joost Daemen (Thoraxcentre, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, NL) provide a concise analysis of the late-breaking science results and spotlight impactful data.
For a deeper dive into key clinical trial data, Dr Harriette Van Spall (McMaster University, Hamilton, CA)talks with principal investigators in her regular Late-Breaker Discussion Series.
Short, accessible Expert Interviews were conducted with select faculty focusing on the results, applicability, and impact on future research.
More from this programme
Part 1
View from the Thoraxcenter
Part 2
Late-breaker Discussion Series
Part 3
Expert Interviews
Faculty Biographies
Transcript
- I'm Marie-Sophie De Koning. I'm the PhD candidate and a lead author of the Groningen Intervention Study for the Preservation of Cardiac Function with Sodium Thiosulfate after Myocardial Infarction, affiliated with the University Medical Center Groningen.
Study Objectives
- This is a trial that we designed after a lot of experimental data that looked very promising. So there were cellular data from mice, from rats, from pigs, from dogs, that all looked very promising in the preservation of myocardial infarction.
Study Design and Patient Cohort
- The study was designed as a randomised, multicentre, placebo-controlled trial and the patients, 380 patients, were enrolled, presenting with a first STEMI and they had to have ongoing complaints and/or ST-deviation, directly after arrival at the cath lab. They were assigned to receive either sodium thiosulfate, twelve and a half grams intravenously, or matching placebo and they received a second dose six hours later.
Study Results
We observed that the mean infarct size in the placebo group was 8.9%, in the sodium thiosulfate group, mean infarct size was 8%. So, we did not observe a reduction in infarct size between groups, between arms.
Take-home Messages for Clinicians
- Well, of course, the outcome was very disappointing but I think we still learned a lot. It is very difficult to design trials in the ischaemia reperfusion arena but it still has potential opportunities in other settings, for example, in the chronic heart failure or other conditions that have been tested experimentally but it shows us just how difficult it is to translate animal experimental findings to real clinical benefits.
Further Study Recommendations
So, further studies in the acute setting. In the Netherlands, the STEMI network is so efficient that patients are presenting within 90 minutes on efforts, so the average infarct size was also below 9%. So, we don't know whether this might be beneficial when they're presenting at a later time, when there is more, longer duration of ischaemia. And we also do not know whether it might be beneficial in long-term treatment.