A Randomized Clinical Trial of Metoprolol in Participants With Mitral Regurgitation.
Information source: Mayo Clinic
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on June 20, 2008 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Heart Valve Diseases
Intervention: metoprolol succinate (Drug)
Phase: Phase 4
Status: Recruiting
Sponsored by: Mayo Clinic Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): Maurice E Sarano, M.D., Principal Investigator, Affiliation: Mayo Clinic
Summary
Mitral valve regurgitation (leakage of the mitral valve of the heart) is frequent and
currently there is no specific medical therapy. Mitral regurgitation is a slowly progressive
disease that frequently requires surgical treatment. This randomized clinincal trial will
use Metoprolol, a common beta-blocker medication, to determine if medical treatment impacts
mitral valve disease progression.
Clinical Details
Official title: Beta Blockade in Mitral Regurgitation
Study design: Treatment, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Control, Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: Degree of mitral regurgitation, assessed as the regurgitant volume, at baseline and 12 months
Secondary outcome: Left ventricular end-diastolic volume index at baseline and 12 monthsLeft atrial end-diastolic volume at baseline and at 12 months
Detailed description:
Background: Mitral regurgitation (MR) is frequent and its prevalence is increasing with aging
of the population. Organic MR, due to primary valvular lesions has severe consequences
determined by its degree, with left ventricular (LV) remodeling and dysfunction, left atrial
(LA) enlargement, leading to poor clinical outcome. Surgery can eliminate MR, but carries
notable risks and is not applicable to all patients. Recent animal data suggest that
beta-blockade in organic MR has significant positive effect, particularly on LV remodeling.
Therefore, chronically decreasing MR, protecting LV and LA with beta-blockade are major goals
of medical therapy. However, effects of chronic oral beta-blockade of human MR are uncertain
and recent practice guidelines underscored these gaps in knowledge and did not recommend
beta-blockade of MR. Hence, a trial of treatment of organic MR is needed. A large trial with
mortality-morbidity end-points is desirable but premature without knowledge of magnitude of
mechanistic effects of beta-blockade. The improvement of these intermediate end-points,
mechanistically linked to outcome, is measurable with non-invasive quantitative techniques
and forms the basis of the present clinical trial proposal. Hypothesis: Chronic
beta-blockade therapy using Metoprolol weighed against placebo produces a sustained reduction
of the consequences of organic MR. Specific aims are that treatment improves a) degree of MR
(decreases regurgitant volume, primary end-point), b) LV remodeling (decreases LV
end-diastolic volume index, second end-point), and c) LA enlargement (decreases LA volume,
third end-point) as compared to placebo. Population: Patients with MR organic (intrinsic
valve disease), isolated (no other valve disease) d moderate (regurgitant volume *30
mL/beat). Methods: A randomized clinical trial, placebo controlled, double-blind, without
crossover, of 12 months oral treatment with potent beta-blockade (Metoprolol XL 50 to 200mg
QD) titrated to the maximally tolerated dose. The trial is preceded by an acute study to
determine tolerance. End-points are measured by Doppler-Echocardiography for quantitation of
MR (regurgitant volume) using combination of 3 simultaneous methods (quantitative Doppler,
two-dimensional echocardiography, proximal flow convergence) and echocardiography for LV and
LA volume measurement. In addition cardiopulmonary exercise testing will measure peak O2
consumption at baseline and follow-up. This study seeks to enroll a total of 60 patients.
The analysis will be based on intention to treat and compare changes in regurgitant volume,
LV end-diastolic volume index and LA volume measured after one year of treatment with active
drug or placebo. The results of this clinical trial should provide strong evidence regarding
medical treatment of patients with organic MR and define future strategies to minimize
mortality and morbidity of organic MR.
Eligibility
Minimum age: 21 Years.
Maximum age: N/A.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion criteria: Patients a) 21 years old or older, with b) MR observed with color flow
imaging, c) due to organic mitral valve disease demonstrated by Echocardiography (not
normal valve as in functional or ischemic MR), c) isolated (no valve disease other than
functional tricuspid regurgitation by Doppler-Echocardiography), d) pure (no mitral
stenosis by Doppler-Echocardiography), e) quantifiable by Doppler-Echocardiography, f) of
degree * moderate, defined as RVol * 30 mL/beat, g) occurring on native valves, h) with
echocardiographic imaging allowing assessment of LA and LV, and i) asymptomatic (or mildly
symptomatic but not considered as candidates for immediate surgery by their attending
physician).
Locations and Contacts
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, United States; Recruiting Diane C Bray, Phone: 507-266-0224, Email: betablockerinmr@mayo.edu Maurice E Sarano, MD, Principal Investigator
Additional Information
Starting date: July 2004
Last updated: September 12, 2005
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