grant

PRE-DETERMINE: Advancing Sudden Arrhythmic Death Prediction in Coronary Artery Disease in the Absence of Severe Systolic Dysfunction

Organization CEDARS-SINAI MEDICAL CENTERLocation LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATESPosted 15 Feb 2023Deadline 31 Jan 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AccountingActive Follow-upAddressAreaArrhythmiaAssayBioassayBiological AssayBiological MarkersBlood PlateletsBlood TestsCardiacCardiac ArrhythmiaCardiac DeathCardiac DiseasesCardiac DisordersCause of DeathCessation of lifeClinicalCohort StudiesCollaborationsConcurrent StudiesCoronary ArteriosclerosisCoronary Artery DiseaseCoronary Artery DisorderCoronary AtherosclerosisCoronary DiseaseCoronary heart diseaseDataDeathDevelopmentDimensionsDisease OutcomeDysfunctionECGEKGEicosanoidsElectrocardiogramElectrocardiographyEventFatty AcidsFunctional disorderFundingGeneral PopulationGeneral PublicGeneticGenotypeGoalsGroups at riskHeart ArrhythmiasHeart DiseasesHematologic TestsHematological TestsHematology TestingImageImplantable Cardioverter-DefibrillatorsImplantable DefibrillatorsIndividualInflammatoryInfrastructureInterventionInvestigatorsInvestmentsKnowledgeLVEFLeft Ventricular Ejection FractionLifeLife ExpectancyMachine LearningMarrow plateletMethodsModelingMolecular FingerprintingMolecular ProfilingNHLBINational Heart, Lung, and Blood InstitutePathway interactionsPatientsPeople at riskPersonsPersons at riskPhenotypePhysiopathologyPlateletsPopulationPopulations at RiskPositionPositioning AttributePredicting RiskPreventionPrevention ResearchPrimary PreventionProceduresProspective StudiesProspective, cohort studyProteinsProteomicsPublic HealthRandomization trialResearch PersonnelResearch ResourcesResearchersResourcesResuscitationRiskRisk MarkerSudden DeathTherapeuticThrombocytesTimeUnited StatesValidationVentricular ArrhythmiaVentricular FibrillationVentricular TachycardiaWorkactive followupadjudicationadjudicative process and procedureadvanced analyticsatherosclerotic coronary diseasebasebasesbio-markersbiologic markerbiomarkercardiac damagecardiac rhythmclinical relevanceclinically relevantcohortcomputer based predictioncoronary arterial diseasecoronary disordercost effectivecost efficientdeath riskdesigndesigningdevelopmentalfollow upfollow-upfollowed upfollowupforecasting riskgenome scalegenome-widegenomewideheart damageheart disorderheart rhythmhigh riskimagingimprovedinnovateinnovationinnovativeinsightmachine based learningmachine learning based methodmachine learning methodmachine learning methodologiesmolecular profilemolecular signaturemortalitymortality riskmulti-modal datamulti-modal datasetsmulti-modalitymultimodal datamultimodal datasetsmultimodalityneglectnew approachesnovelnovel approachesnovel strategiesnovel strategypathophysiologypathwaypredict riskpredict riskspredicted riskpredicted riskspredicting riskspredictive modelingpredictive riskpredicts riskpreventpreventingrandomized trialretention rateretention strategyrisk predictionrisk prediction algorithmrisk prediction modelrisk predictionsrisk predictorrisk predictorsrisk stratificationstratify risktoolvalidations
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Full Description

Sudden and/or arrhythmic death (SAD), which typically results from lethal ventricular arrhythmias (ventricular
tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation, VT/VF) in the setting of coronary heart disease (CHD), afflicts an

estimated 310,000 persons annually in the United States. Reductions in SAD have continued to lag those

observed for other coronary heart disease (CHD) outcomes despite advances in resuscitation therapies and

the use of implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs). Current approaches to SAD prevention remain

centered on placing ICDs in patients with left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) <30-35% – even though the

majority of SAD occurs in the setting of LVEF >30-35%. In effect, the proportionately larger segment of the

at-risk population has been understudied and thus undertreated. Despite this unmet need, there remain very

few, if any, prospective studies examining SAD risk prediction in individuals with CHD and LVEF >30-35% over

a long enough time horizon where ICD therapy might be cost-effective. For this very reason, the PRE-

DETERMINE Cohort Study was intentionally designed to address this scientific gap and prospectively

study clinically relevant approaches to SAD risk prediction in CHD patients with LVEF >30-35%. In this

application, we propose to leverage the originally NHLBI-funded base cohort resource to continue adjudication

of accruing SAD and VT/VF events, in addition to competing causes of death, to attain 10+ years of endpoint

adjudication to enable the development and validation of multi-marker SAD risk prediction models based on

combinations of multi-dimensional clinical, ECG, imaging, biomarker, and genetic data generated in this unique

multicenter cohort of 5761 CHD patients. We will also leverage the base cohort to interrogate novel fatty acid

derived eicosanoids and putative arrhythmia modulating proteomic analytes in relation to risk for SAD and

competing causes of mortality in patients with CHD. Novel methods of competing risk analyses will be used to

integrate absolute and proportional SAD risk into SAD risk prediction models and to elucidate separate

associations between SAD vs. non-SAD causes of death. Machine learning approaches will be applied to

uncover inter-relations and latent features from multi-modality data not easily detected by conventional models.

An overarching goal of our work is to accurately identify those individual subsets of the broader population who

have sufficiently high absolute and proportional risk for SAD that they warrant inclusion in randomized trials of

primary prevention ICD therapy. The aims of the current proposal also offer new opportunities to identify

potential mechanistic pathways underlying the genesis of lethal ventricular arrhythmias that could serve as

novel targets for SAD prevention – extending beyond ICD placement – in patients with CHD and possibly even

in the general population wherein CHD underlies most SAD events. The continuation and expansion of the

PRE-DETERMINE study will provide the scientific field with a one-of-a kind resource for investigators and

trainees collaborating toward the common goal of reducing the burden of SAD.

Grant Number: 5R01HL165840-03
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: CHRISTINE ALBERT

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