Imidapril Hydrochloride

Clinical trials investigating Imidapril Hydrochloride are studying people with heart failure. These trials look at how it compares with other heart medicines and whether it helps improve symptoms and heart-related measures. The main goals are to assess treatment effects, dose response, and outcomes in patients receiving standard care.

Table of contents

Trial overview

The source data includes one interventional study, which means researchers gave treatments and measured the results.[1] The study was completed and enrolled 740 people.[1] It studied patients with heart failure and included Imidapril Hydrochloride among several heart medicines used in the treatment setting.[1]

Who was studied

The study focused on symptomatic HF patients, meaning people with heart failure who had symptoms.[1] It included patients with LVEF < 50%, which means the heart’s main pumping chamber was sending out less blood than normal.[1] Patients were treated with standard of care, including ACEI or ARB therapy, or sacubitril/valsartan.[1]

What was tested

The brief summary says the study aimed to evaluate the efficacy and dose-response relationship of three target dose levels compared with placebo.[1] A dose-response relationship asks whether different doses lead to different effects.[1] The intervention list also shows many background heart medicines, including Imidapril Hydrochloride, as part of the treatment context described in the trial data.[1]

Study design and phase

This was a Phase 2 trial.[1] Phase 2 studies usually look at whether a treatment seems effective and help define the right dose range.[1] The study compared three target dose levels with placebo, which is a look-alike treatment used for comparison.[1]

Outcomes measured

The main outcome was change in log NT-proBNP from baseline to Week 16.[1] NT-proBNP is a blood marker that can rise when the heart is under stress.[1] Measuring the change over time helps researchers see whether the study treatment may improve heart failure-related strain.[1]

What the results focus on

Because the trial was completed, the main value of the record is in understanding the study question, the patient group, and the outcome that was measured.[1] The trial was designed to learn whether the tested treatment approach could lower NT-proBNP in symptomatic patients with reduced heart function.[1] The data also show that the study was done on top of usual heart failure treatment, which helps make the findings more relevant to everyday care settings.[1]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
2023-504678-39-00 Phase 2 Heart Failure Completed 740

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Imidapril Hydrochloride

  • Study of XXB750 and Drug Combination for Patients with Heart Failure

    Not recruiting

    1 1
    Bulgaria Czechia Denmark France Germany Hungary +5

Glossary

  • Heart failure: A condition where the heart does not pump blood as well as it should.
  • Symptomatic: Having signs or symptoms of a disease, such as shortness of breath or tiredness.
  • LVEF: Left ventricular ejection fraction. This is a measure of how much blood the main pumping chamber of the heart sends out with each beat.
  • Phase 2: A study stage that looks at whether a treatment may work and helps find the best dose.
  • Interventional study: A trial where researchers give a treatment and then measure what happens.
  • Placebo: A look-alike treatment that does not contain the active study drug, used for comparison.
  • Standard of care: Usual treatment that patients already receive for their condition.
  • ACEI: Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor. This is a class of heart medicine listed in the trial data.
  • ARB: Angiotensin receptor blocker. This is another class of heart medicine listed in the trial data.
  • NT-proBNP: A blood marker that can rise when the heart is under stress or not working well.
  • Dose-response relationship: A way to see whether different doses lead to different effects.

References