Actively Recruiting
pErsonalised Nocebo Assessment of Beta-blockEr Symptoms in Heart Failure
Led by Imperial College London · Updated on 2025-06-19
150
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
135 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Beta-blocker tablets are an effective treatment for heart failure that make people live longer and reduce the need to be admitted to hospital. Many patients who are at high risk of death are prescribed beta-blockers, but later choose to stop taking them because of symptoms that they perceive to be side-effects. Some patients' symptoms may genuinely be side-effects due to the beta-blocker tablets, but, in reality, many of the symptoms which may lead to people stopping beta-blockers are actually experienced at similar rates compared to placebo. The symptoms may be caused by heart failure itself, or the expectation that they will have a side effect when they take a tablet (the nocebo effect). There is a need to be able to identify the majority of patients who aren't actually having side-effects so that they can restart beta-blockers and not miss out on life-prolonging treatment. To answer this question reliably and with high precision requires a personalised approach with an 'N-of-1' study. This study will measure participants' symptoms in three scenarios: taking a beta-blocker tablet (bisoprolol 2.5mg) or a placebo tablet or no study medication in a randomised order. The primary aim of this study is to determine, for an individual, whether the adverse effects of beta-blockade in heart failure are genuine. Specifically, the objectives are: 1. To determine the proportion of a patient's symptoms that are due to taking beta-blocker tablets, and the proportion that are due to the expectation that the treatment will cause symptoms (the nocebo effect). 2. To determine whether, on average, symptoms are worse when taking beta-blocker compared to placebo tablets or no treatment. 3. To determine whether on average symptom intensity associated with beta-blockade decreases after receiving a report on how much of their symptoms are due to the beta-blocker. Throughout the protocol participants report daily the intensity of the symptom that previously led to their beta-blocker cessation via a smartphone app. Participants will report weekly their adherence, general heart failure symptoms and quality of life. In this way the investigators will discover, for an individual patient, the proportion of their symptom that is due to the beta-blocker tablet, and whether knowing their personalised results helps them to restart beta-blocker tablets.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
pErsonalised Nocebo Assessment of Beta-blockEr Symptoms in Heart Failure
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Heart failure with left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) less than 40%
- Not currently taking beta-blocker tablets
- Previously tried beta-blocker tablets and stopped due to symptoms thought to be caused by the medication
- Willing and able to consent to participate in the study
You will not qualify if you...
- History of severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis) to beta-blockers
- Clinical reasons not to take bisoprolol, such as:
- Asthma needing high-level treatment (BTS step 3 or higher)
- Very slow heart rate (below 50 beats per minute)
- Low blood pressure causing symptoms (systolic below 85 mmHg)
- Metabolic acidosis
- Phaeochromocytoma
- First-degree heart block with PR interval over 250 ms
- Second-degree or complete heart block
- Sick sinus syndrome
- Acute pulmonary edema
- Life expectancy less than 1 year
- Refusal or inability to participate in the study
AI-Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Imperial College London
London, United Kingdom, W12 0HS
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
S
Sameer Zaman, MBBS
CONTACT
A
Amanpal Sidhu, MBChB
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
TRIPLE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Purpose
PREVENTION
Number of Arms
3
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