Selatogrel

Clinical trials are investigating Selatogrel in people at risk of a repeat acute myocardial infarction (heart attack). These studies aim to check how well it works when self-administered at the start of symptoms, and to measure safety and bleeding risk in large patient groups.

Table of Contents

Trial overview

The main clinical trial in the source data is NCT04957719, titled “Selatogrel Outcome Study in Suspected Acute Myocardial Infarction.”[1] It is an interventional study, which means researchers give a study treatment and then measure the results.[1] The trial is listed as Authorised and is in Phase 3.[1]

The study is designed to assess the clinical efficacy of Selatogrel when it is self-administered at the start of symptoms suggestive of an acute myocardial infarction.[1] In simple terms, researchers want to know whether early use of the study treatment can help people who think they may be having a heart attack.[1]

Who is being studied

The target condition in this trial is acute myocardial infarction (AMI), which is the medical term for a heart attack.[1] The study brief says it is for subjects at risk of having a recurrent AMI, meaning another heart attack after a previous one.[1]

The trial focuses on people who can self-administer the treatment when symptoms suggest AMI.[1] This makes the study especially relevant for patients who may need to act quickly before reaching medical care.[1]

Trial design and treatment groups

The intervention list includes Selatogrel solution and a matching placebo solution.[1] A placebo is a look-alike treatment with no active study drug, used so researchers can compare results fairly.[1]

The Selatogrel dose listed in the trial data is 16 mg given by subcutaneous administration, which means under the skin.[1] The source data do not provide more detail on the full treatment schedule, but they do show that the study compares Selatogrel with matching placebo.[1]

The planned enrollment is 21,251 participants, which makes this a very large study.[1] Large trials can help researchers see both benefits and safety signals more clearly.[1]

What the studies measure

The main outcome is efficacy, or how well the treatment works.[1] The primary endpoint is a ranked outcome that includes death from any cause or non-fatal AMI after treatment self-administration.[1]

The ranking in the primary endpoint goes from the most severe event to less severe events: death, AMI with compromised electro-hemodynamics, STEMI, high-risk NSTEMI, NSTEMI with peak cardiac troponin greater than 10 times the upper limit of normal, and none of these events within 7 or 2 days after each treatment administration.[1] Electro-hemodynamics refers to the heart’s electrical and blood-flow stability, so “compromised” means the heart is not functioning normally in that way.[1]

The study also measures safety, with a focus on treatment-emergent bleeding events.[1] Specifically, it looks for type 3 or 5 bleeding events according to the Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) definition within 2 days after study treatment administration.[1] These are serious bleeding categories used in heart research.[1]

Why these trials matter

People with suspected heart attack often need fast action, so a trial that tests self-administration at symptom onset is aimed at a very early treatment window.[1] The study is trying to find out whether Selatogrel can improve important clinical outcomes in people already at risk for another AMI.[1]

Because the study includes both benefit measures and bleeding safety measures, it is designed to show not only whether the treatment may help, but also whether it may cause important harm.[1] This balance is especially important in heart attack research, where quick treatment and safety both matter.[1]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
NCT04957719 Phase 3 Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) Authorised 21,251

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Selatogrel

  • Study on Selatogrel for Preventing Heart Attack in Patients with Recent Heart Attack History

    Recruiting

    1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Investigated drugs:
    Austria Belgium Bulgaria Croatia Czechia Denmark +17

Glossary

  • Acute myocardial infarction (AMI): A heart attack. It happens when blood flow to part of the heart is blocked, causing damage to heart muscle.
  • Recurrent AMI: A new heart attack in someone who has already had one before.
  • Self-administration: When the patient gives the study treatment to themselves, usually at the start of symptoms.
  • Symptoms suggestive of AMI: Warning signs that may point to a heart attack, such as chest pain or other sudden heart-related symptoms.
  • Phase 3: A late-stage clinical trial done in a large group of people to study how well a treatment works and how safe it is.
  • Interventional study: A trial where researchers give a study treatment and then measure what happens.
  • Primary outcome: The main result the study is designed to measure.
  • Efficacy: How well a treatment works.
  • Safety: How well a treatment is tolerated and whether it causes important harm.
  • Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) bleeding: A standard way to classify bleeding in heart studies. Type 3 or 5 means serious bleeding.
  • STEMI: A type of heart attack that usually means a major artery is fully blocked.
  • NSTEMI: A type of heart attack that does not show the same ECG pattern as STEMI, but still causes heart damage.

References