Benign Acute Pericarditis: Brief Versus Longer Treatment Using Aspirin

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2009
Treatment of pericarditis largely remains empirical due to the relative lack of randomized controlled trials. Nevertheless, some recommendations have been formulated to guide management and follow-up of acute pericarditis. Aspirin or an NSAID at medium to high dosages is the mainstay of treatment. Optimal length of treatment is not established. PERICARDITE is a French multicentric placebo controlled double blind randomized trial assessing efficacy of a brief treatment based on Aspirin (4 days) versus a longer treatment (21days) in treating a first episode of probably idiopathic acute pericarditis. It is a non inferiority trial. Exclusion criteria are: diseases known to cause pericarditis: (recent myocardial infarction, autoimmune disease, postpericardiotomy syndromes, connective tissue disease, tuberculosis, neoplastic disease). Primary endpoint is: 30 days recovery defined as the normalization of all clinical and paraclinical initial abnormalities. Secondary endpoint is: 6-month recurrence.
Epistemonikos ID: 320a0485dace3e3571b95764a15d5febfe6fd104
First added on: May 05, 2024