Rationale and design of the ARAMIS trial: Anakinra versus placebo, a double blind randomized controlled trial for the treatment of acute myocarditis - 12/10/23

, Fleur Cohen b, Alain Combes a, c, Zahir Amoura b, Carine Pare d, Delphine Brugier a, Etienne Puymirat e, Jeremie Abtan f, Benoit Lattuca g, Jean-Guillaume Dillinger h, Marie Hauguel-Moreau i, Johanne Silvain a, Joe-Elie Salem j, Estelle Gandjbakhch a, Guillaume Hekimian a, c, Alban Redheuil a, k, l, Eric Vicaut d, Gilles Montalescot afor the
ACTION Study Group
Graphical abstract |
Highlights |
• | ARAMIS is a national multicentre prospective randomized double blind study. |
• | The study evaluates anakinra, an interleukin-1 receptor antagonist. |
• | Anakinra is compared with placebo in 120 patients with acute myocarditis. |
• | ARAMIS hypothesis: that anakinra is effective and safe in acute myocarditis. |
• | Primary endpoint: number of days alive free from any myocarditis complications. |
• | The endpoint is assessed from randomization to 28 days after hospital discharge. |
• | A second randomization evaluates benefit and safety of ACE inhibitor continuation. |
• | The evaluation is in patients with preserved LVEF 4 weeks after hospital discharge. |
Abstract |
Background |
Acute myocarditis is an inflammation of the myocardium that can cause life-threatening events. However, anti-inflammatory strategies did not reduce the risk of clinical outcomes in randomized trials. Recently, experimental studies have suggested that specific blockade of the interleukin-1β immune innate pathway could be effective in acute myocarditis.
Aim |
To test the hypothesis that inhibition of the interleukin-1β immune innate pathway can reduce the risk of clinical events in acute myocarditis.
Methods |
The “Anakinra versus placebo double blind Randomized controlled trial for the treatment of Acute MyocarditIS” (ARAMIS) trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03018834) is a national multicentre randomized parallel-group double blind study among symptomatic patients with elevated cardiac troponin and cardiac magnetic resonance-proven acute myocarditis. Patients (n=120) are randomized within 72hours of hospital admission to receive a daily subcutaneous dose of anakinra 100mg or placebo during the hospitalization, in addition to standard of care, including an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor and a beta-blocker. The primary endpoint is the number of days alive free from any myocarditis complication, including ventricular arrhythmias, heart failure, recurrent chest pain requiring medication and ventricular dysfunction (defined as left ventricular ejection fraction<50%), from randomization to 28 days after hospital discharge. At 28 days after discharge, patients with normal left ventricular ejection fraction are then randomized to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor continuation or discontinuation and all patients are followed for 1 year, with regular left ventricular function evaluation.
Conclusions |
ARAMIS is the first trial evaluating inhibition of the interleukin-1β immune innate pathway in the setting of acute myocarditis. Although of small size, it will be the largest randomized trial in acute myocarditis, a serious and poorly studied cardiac condition.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Acute myocarditis, Interleukin-1 receptor antagonist protein, Randomized controlled trial, Methodology, Placebo
Abbreviations : ACE, ACTION, ANCOV, AP–HP, ARAMIS, CMR, COVID-19, LVEF, NLRP3, NT-proBNP
Plan
| ☆ | Tweet: The study design of ARAMIS is now out in ACVD! It is the first trial evaluating the inhibition of the IL-1β pathway in myocarditis patients and tests the hypothesis that anakinra is both safe and effective during the acute phase of the disease among 120 participants. @ActionCoeur. |
Vol 116 - N° 10
P. 460-466 - octobre 2023 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
