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Stress-Echography in Hereditary Haemorrhagic Telangiectasia Patient With Hepatic Involvement

Evaluation of the Value of Measuring Pulmonary Arterial Pressures During Exercise in Hereditary Haemorrhagic Telangiectasia Patients With Hepatic Involvement - Pilot Study

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05954481
Acronym
ROSE
Enrollment
47
Registered
2023-07-20
Start date
2023-08-03
Completion date
2025-01-14
Last updated
2025-12-19

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia, Rendu Osler Disease

Keywords

HHT, Stress echography, Pulmonary arterial pressures

Brief summary

The hepatic involvement of HHT (Hereditary Haemorrhagic Telangiectasia) disease is characterised by the formation of arterio-sus-hepatic shunts which lead to dilatation of the hepatic artery and may result in high output heart failure. This evolves silently for long-standing period from left ventricular cavities dilatation to advanced heart failure with post-capillary pulmonary hypertension (PH) (more rarely pre-capillary), and its evolution is poorly understood. The specific treatment options for HHT disease are either the use of anti-angiogenic therapy (bevacizumab) or liver transplantation. As rest echocardiography can only detect advanced cases or heart failure with rest PH, the investigators speculate that exercise echocardiography can provide additional information in patients without rest PH. The hypothesis is that an exaggerated pulmonary pressure increase during exercise may precede the occurrence of rest PH in the course of the disease. It could identify patients with substantial heart failure at an earlier stage and may facilitate the access to liver transplantation. These parameters have never been studied in this context and it seems interesting to evaluate them in this pilot study. The investigators hypothesise that HHT (Hereditary Haemorrhagic Telangiectasia) patients with hepatic involvement and cardiac high output will have significantly greater and/or earlier elevation of exercise pulmonary arterial pressures than those with normal cardiac output.

Interventions

After a rest trans thoracic echocardiography (usual follow-up), eligible patients will have a stress ultrasound echocardiography on a dedicated cycle ergometer

Sponsors

Hospices Civils de Lyon
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* HHT patient \> 18 yo * Hepatic involvement (hepatic artery diameter \> 6mm) * Patient having received the information and signed the informed consent form * Patient affiliated to a social security scheme or beneficiaries of a similar scheme

Exclusion criteria

* Haemoglobin \< 90 g/L * Active Infection * Atrial Fibrillation permanent or persistent * Known cardiopathy * Pregnant or breastfeeding woman (by questioning) * Adult subject to a legal protection measure (guardianship) * Participation in another clinical trial that may interfere with the proposed trial (investigator judgment) * Patient physically unable to pedal * Patient with Pulmonary arteriovenous malformations awaiting embolization * Patient treated with beta-blockers Secondary

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Comparison of exercise pulmonary artery systolic pressure in patients with HHT and liver involvement.Day 1The systolic pulmonary artery pressure (PAPS) during exercise will be compared between the two groups of patients. PAPS will be estimated by the maximum velocity (Vmax) of tricuspid insufficiency flow at peak exercise on cardiac ultrasound.

Countries

France

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026