A double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial of the coronary sinus Reducer in refractory angina: design and rationale of the ORBITA-COSMIC trial

Michael J Foley, Christopher A Rajkumar, Fiyyaz Ahmed-Jushuf, Florentina Simader, Rachel H Pathimagaraj, Sukhjinder Nijjer, Sayan Sen, Ricardo Petraco, Gerald Clesham, Thomas Johnson, Frank E Harrell, Peter Kellman, Darrel Francis, Matthew Shun-Shin, James Howard, Graham D Cole, Rasha Al-Lamee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The coronary sinus Reducer (CSR) is an hourglass-shaped device which creates an artificial stenosis in the coronary sinus. Whilst placebo-controlled data show an improvement in angina, these results are unreplicated and are the subject of further confirmatory research. The mechanism of action of this unintuitive therapy is unknown. The Coronary Sinus Reducer Objective Impact on Symptoms, MRI Ischaemia, and Microvascular Resistance (ORBITA-COSMIC) trial is a randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial investigating the efficacy of the CSR. Patients with (i) established epicardial coronary artery disease, (ii) angina on maximally tolerated antianginal medication, (iii) evidence of myocardial ischaemia and (iv) no further options for percutaneous coronary intervention or coronary artery bypass grafting will be enrolled. Upon enrolment, angina and quality-of-life questionnaires, treadmill exercise testing and quantitative stress perfusion cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging will be performed. Participants will record their symptoms daily on a smartphone application throughout the trial. After a 2-week symptom assessment phase, participants will be randomised in the cardiac catheterisation laboratory to CSR or a placebo procedure. After 6 months of blinded follow-up, all prerandomisation tests will be repeated. A prespecified subgroup will undergo invasive coronary physiology assessment at prerandomisation and follow-up. The primary outcome is stress myocardial blood flow on CMR. Secondary outcomes include angina frequency, quality of life and treadmill exercise time. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04892537).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e216-e223
JournalEurointervention
Volume20
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Feb 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Europa Digital & Publishing 2024 All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Humans
  • Angina, Stable/diagnosis
  • Quality of Life
  • Coronary Sinus/surgery
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
  • Coronary Artery Disease/therapy

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