Table of contents
- Trial overview
- Who can join the study
- What is being measured
- Safety monitoring
- Study design and treatment groups
- Trial status and size
Trial overview
The main study of Ab-1002 is GenePHIT, a Phase 2 interventional trial in adults with congestive heart failure and non-ischemic cardiomyopathy.[1] The study is designed to learn more about both efficacy and safety, which means whether the treatment may help and whether it can be used with acceptable risk in the study setting.[1]
This trial is authorised and plans to compare Ab-1002 with placebo in people with NYHA Class III heart failure symptoms.[1] The brief summary says the study looks at a single antegrade intracoronary artery infusion of AB-1002 versus placebo infusion.[1]
Who can join the study
The trial includes adult subjects with NYHA Class III congestive heart failure and non-ischemic cardiomyopathy.[1] NYHA Class III means symptoms happen with ordinary activity or even less activity than usual, so this group has clear heart failure limitations in daily life.[1]
Non-ischemic cardiomyopathy means the heart muscle is weak or abnormal, but the problem is not caused by blocked heart arteries.[1] The study information does not list more detailed inclusion or exclusion rules, so only this target population can be confirmed from the source data.[1]
What is being measured
The main outcome is a modified win ratio at 52 weeks.[1] A win ratio is a way to compare two groups by ranking several outcomes in order of importance, rather than using just one result.[1]
The study uses a hierarchical order of outcomes: cardiovascular related death, change in NYHA class, change in LVEF, and change in the six-minute walk test.[1] In simple terms, the trial first looks at the most serious outcome, then at heart failure symptoms, then at heart pumping function, and then at walking ability.[1]
LVEF stands for left ventricular ejection fraction, which is a measure of how much blood the heart pumps out with each beat.[1] For this study, a responder is defined as someone with at least a 5% increase in LVEF.[1] For the six-minute walk test, a responder is defined as someone who improves by more than 30 meters.[1]
Safety monitoring
The trial also checks safety over the 52-week observation period.[1] Researchers will track treatment-emergent adverse events and serious adverse events, which are unwanted medical problems that appear after treatment starts.[1]
Safety monitoring also includes lab tests, vital signs, and electrocardiograms, also called ECGs.[1] Lab tests look at body chemistry, vital signs include basic measures such as blood pressure and pulse, and ECGs record the heart’s electrical activity.[1]
Study design and treatment groups
This is an interventional study, meaning the research team assigns the treatment rather than only observing what happens in routine care.[1] Participants are assigned to Ab-1002 or placebo, so the study can compare outcomes between the two groups.[1]
The summary describes a single antegrade intracoronary artery infusion, which means the study treatment is given into a coronary artery in the direction of blood flow.[1] The source data does not provide more detail about visit schedules or other study procedures beyond the 52-week observation period.[1]
Trial status and size
The trial status is listed as Authorised.[1] The planned enrollment is 323 participants, which is the number of people the study aims to include.[1]
At present, the available data shows one registered trial for Ab-1002 in this heart failure setting.[1] The study is focused on a specific group of adults with symptomatic heart failure, so the results will mainly apply to that population.[1]


