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Breaking Fasts Ahead of Cardiac Caths

Breaking Fasts Ahead of Cardiac Caths

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The goal of this clinical trial is to find out whether fasting is necessary before urgent inpatient cardiac catheterizations. For patients presenting with urgent heart-related pain or even mild heart attacks, researchers want to know whether eating and drinking before their procedure improves comfort without raising the risk of complications.

The study will answer:

  • Does eating and drinking before the procedure improve patient comfort?
  • Does it increase the risk of adverse events like vomiting, aspiration (food or liquid entering the lungs), breathing problems, or death, etc?

Participants will be randomly assigned to either:

  • A standard fasting group (no food for 6 hours, no clear liquids for 2 hours), or
  • A no-fasting group (able to eat and drink as usual).

Patients will complete brief surveys before the procedure to assess comfort and satisfaction. Researchers will also review medical records weekly and 30 days later to monitor for safety outcomes.

Description

While pre-procedural fasting is a longstanding tradition in cardiac catheterization, there is limited evidence supporting its necessity in low-risk patients undergoing urgent procedures for acute coronary syndromes (ACS). Existing studies have lacked adequate recruitment of ACS patients, comprehensive demographic capture, and long-term outcomes.

This randomized clinical trial will enroll adult inpatients undergoing cardiac catheterization for worsening angina and low risk ACS (unstable angina, and non-high risk NSTEMI's) with planned moderate proceduralist-guided sedation. Participants will be randomized 1:1 to either standard fasting (≥6 hours for solids and ≥2 hours for clear liquids) or no fasting requirement.

The primary endpoint is a composite of patient-reported outcomes assessing comfort and satisfaction. Secondary outcomes focus on clinical safety metrics, such as hemodynamic instability, aspiration pneumonia, ICU admission, procedural sedation requirements, and 30-day mortality, etc.

Proceduralists will remain unblinded; however, outcome assessment and statistical analysis will be performed by blinded third-party personnel. This trial aims to provide high-quality data to assess the necessity and impact of fasting in this specific patient population.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria: * All scheduled urgent inpatient non-high risk cardiac catheterizations for worsening angina (cardiac chest pain or anginal equivalent), unstable angina, or non-high risk NSTEMI-NSTEMI's with GRACE score \<140 points) utilizing proceduralist guided sedation Exclusion Criteria: * High risk NSTEMI's defined as NSTEMI's with a GRACE score \>140 points * Hemodynamic instability (\6L Nasal Cannula Supplementation, BiPAP, or invasive ventilation * Emergent interventions: STEMI/high risk NSTEMI * Need for mechanical circulatory support-ECMO, Impella or intra-aortic balloon pump

Study details
    Stable Angina (SA)
    Unstable Angina (UA)
    NSTEMI - Non-ST Segment Elevation MI

NCT06996639

University of South Florida

1 February 2026

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