Safety and Efficacy of Direct Blood Volume Measurement in the Treatment of Heart Failure



Status:Terminated
Conditions:Cardiology
Therapuetic Areas:Cardiology / Vascular Diseases
Healthy:No
Age Range:21 - Any
Updated:4/21/2016
Start Date:October 2010
End Date:June 2013

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Treating to Euvolemia by Clinical Assessment and Measured Blood Volume in Heart Failure

Heart failure is a common cardiac condition affecting nearly 6 million Americans. Silent
blood volume overload is common in patients with heart failure and is associated with
increased risk of death. This study is designed to determine if adjustment of therapy based
on direct measurement of blood volume will reduce risk of hospitalization and death when
compared with therapy based on clinical assessment of blood volume in patients with chronic
heart failure.

Multicenter prospective randomized trial to compare heart failure management strategies
based on clinical assessment of volume status vs. direct measurement of blood volume with a
radioisotope technique. Subjects will be randomly assigned to a standard care strategy with
guideline recommended treatment based on serial clinical assessment of blood volume or a
measured blood volume strategy with guideline recommended treatment based on serial measured
blood volume. All subjects will undergo blood volume measurement procedures, but the testing
results will only be returned to the physician in the group assigned to management according
to measured blood volume status. Subjects will be blinded to their study treatment
assignment status.

Inclusion Criteria:

- Age >21 years

- Discharge from hospital or emergency department observation unit with a primary
diagnosis of acute decompensated heart failure

- Planned discharge home

- Able and willing to provide informed consent

Exclusion Criteria:

- Significant co-morbidity during heart failure hospitalization (treated pneumonia,
sepsis, respiratory failure, oliguric renal failure, major bleeding requiring
transfusion, stroke)

- Heart failure primarily due to significant valvular disease, sub-aortic outflow
obstruction, active myocardial ischemia, apical ballooning syndrome, active
arrhythmias, active myocarditis, primary restrictive cardiomyopathy, pericardial
disease, or congenital heart disease

- Other major co-morbidities that increase mortality risk (stroke with hemiplegia,
diabetes with end-organ damage other than heart disease, history of cancer in last 2
years, moderate to severe liver disease, HIV infection with AIDS)

- Hospitalization length of stay >10 days

- Evidence of acute coronary syndrome during qualifying heart failure hospitalization

- Planned revascularization procedure within 6 months

- Planned implantation of ICD or pacemaker within 6 months

- Planned placement on cardiac transplantation list within 6 months

- Planned other major cardiac surgery or other surgery within 6 months

- Planned intermittent or continuous intravenous positive inotropic therapy

- Planned intermittent or continuous intravenous vasodilator therapy

- Severe obesity (BMI ≥ 40 kg/m2) or cachexia (BMI ≤18 kg/m2)

- Severe chronic kidney disease (estimated GFR<30 ml/min (Modification of Diet in Renal
Disease formula20))

- Hemoglobin < 10 gm/dl

- Non-cardiac primary limitation to exercise (rheumatological, orthopedic, pulmonary,
neurological or peripheral vascular disease)

- Known history of non-adherence with medications

- Psycho-social factors that interfere with ability to adhere to study procedures
(dementia, active substance abuse, poorly controlled psychiatric illnesses, inability
to travel frequently to the study center)

- Pregnant women or nursing mothers

- Women of childbearing potential not using adequate birth control methods

- Known hypersensitivity to iodine, eggs, or any other component of the Volumex
injection kit

- History of anaphylaxis

- Participation in another heart failure investigational treatment protocol currently
or <30 days
We found this trial at
9
sites
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 18015
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Baltimore, Maryland 21201
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1653 W. Congress Parkway
Chicago, Illinois 60612
(312) 942-5000
Rush University Medical Center Rush University Medical Center encompasses a 664-bed hospital serving adults and...
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Honolulu, Hawaii 96813
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Nashvilled, Tennessee
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550 1st Ave
New York, New York 10016
(212) 263-7300
New York University Langone Medical Center NYU NYU Langone Medical Center, a world-class, patient-centered, integrated,...
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New York, NY
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722 W 168th St
New York, New York 10032
(212) 305-2500
Columbia Presbyterian Med Ctr On January 1, 1998, The New York Hospital publicly announced its...
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3401 N Broad St
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
(215) 707-2000
Temple University Hospital On January 18, 1892 a three-story house at 3403 North Broad Street...
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Philadelphia, PA
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223 N Van Dien Ave
Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450
(201) 447-8000
The Valley Hospital The Valley Hospital is a fully accredited, acute care, not-for-profit hospital serving...
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Ridgewood, NJ
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