Publication: CIBER-CLAP (CIBERCV Cardioprotection Large Animal Platform): A multicenter preclinical network for testing reproducibility in cardiovascular interventions.
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Date
2019-12-30
Authors
Rossello, Xavier
Rodriguez-Sinovas, Antonio
Vilahur, Gemma
Crisóstomo, Verónica
Jorge, Inmaculada
Zaragoza, Carlos
Zamorano, José L
Bermejo, Javier
Ordoñez, Antonio
Boscá, Lisardo
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Abstract
Despite many cardioprotective interventions have shown to protect the heart against ischemia/reperfusion injury in the experimental setting, only few of them have succeeded in translating their findings into positive proof-of-concept clinical trials. Controversial and inconsistent experimental and clinical evidence supports the urgency of a disruptive paradigm shift for testing cardioprotective therapies. There is a need to evaluate experimental reproducibility before stepping into the clinical arena. The CIBERCV (acronym for Spanish network-center for cardiovascular biomedical research) has set up the "Cardioprotection Large Animal Platform" (CIBER-CLAP) to perform experimental studies testing the efficacy and reproducibility of promising cardioprotective interventions based on a pre-specified design and protocols, randomization, blinding assessment and other robust methodological features. Our first randomized, control-group, open-label blinded endpoint experimental trial assessing local ischemic preconditioning (IPC) in a pig model of acute myocardial infarction (n = 87) will be carried out in three separate sets of experiments performed in parallel by three laboratories. Each set aims to assess: (A) CMR-based outcomes; (B) histopathological-based outcomes; and (C) protein-based outcomes. Three core labs will assess outcomes in a blinded fashion (CMR imaging, histopathology and proteomics) and 2 methodological core labs will conduct the randomization and statistical analysis.
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MeSH Terms
Animals
Biomedical Research
Cardiovascular Diseases
Humans
Models, Animal
Multicenter Studies as Topic
Research Design
Spain
Swine
Biomedical Research
Cardiovascular Diseases
Humans
Models, Animal
Multicenter Studies as Topic
Research Design
Spain
Swine