Empagliflozin as a Potential Therapeutic Solution for Patients With Brugada Syndrome
Status:
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Trial end date:
2027-09-21
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if Empagliflozin works to treat Brugada syndrome patients by affecting their electrocardiographic (ECG) patterns, and to evaluate its safety.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
* Does Empagliflozin improve specific electrocardiogram (ECG) patterns in Brugada syndrome patients, specifically by observing the change in J-point elevation recorded in V1 and V2 leads at the 4th, 3rd, and 2nd intercostal spaces (ICSs)? A responder is defined as a decrease in J-point elevation of 1 mm.
* What adverse events do participants experience when taking Empagliflozin, including hypotension, acute renal failure, hepatic injury, ketoacidosis, hypoglycemic events, urinary tract infections, genital infections, bone fractures, and events leading to lower limb amputation?
Researchers will compare each participant's ECG changes before and after three months of Empagliflozin treatment to assess its efficacy
Participants will:
* Take Empagliflozin once daily, starting at 10 mg. The dose will be increased to 25 mg at monthly follow-ups if participants are non-responders based on ECG ST-segment morphology. The total treatment period is three months.
* Visit the outpatient clinic monthly for three months of treatment to monitor efficacy and safety. The overall trial period, including screening, treatment, and follow-up, comprises five scheduled visits.
* Undergo a series of check-ups and tests, including:
* 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) recordings.
* Monitoring and documentation of adverse events.
* Blood and urine tests, such as complete blood count (CBC), liver function tests (AST/ALT), renal function tests (BUN/creatinine), electrolytes (sodium/potassium/calcium/magnesium/albumin), urinalysis, fasting glucose, HbA1c, and ketone measurements.