STRATegy SUccesS in High-Risk PCI With Impella CP: Evaluation of Hemodynamic Protection in Complex PCI

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2026
STRATUS-PCI is a pilot clinical trial that compares two ways of running a small heart pump called Impella CP during a high-risk procedure to open blocked heart arteries (percutaneous coronary intervention, or PCI) in patients with weakened heart muscle. The pump is placed temporarily through an artery in the leg and sits across the aortic valve to help maintain blood flow during the procedure. Fifty patients at two hospitals (Vienna and Dresden) will be randomly assigned in equal numbers to one of two pump settings: an automatic mode that adjusts flow up to higher levels as needed, or a fixed lower-flow mode (P-2). The doctor performing the heart procedure will not know which setting is being used (double-blind). A separate doctor monitors blood pressure and is allowed to change the pump setting at any time if the patient becomes unstable. The main question is whether the automatic mode helps doctors complete the planned heart procedure more successfully and without drops in blood pressure or other complications. Patients will be followed for 30 days in clinic and by telephone at 1, 3, 5, and 10 years. Results will help design a larger future trial.
Epistemonikos ID: 77f69e735b5bd80bb159730bd5c2c075c048dc7b
First added on: May 15, 2026