Updated May 2026 · ClinicalTrials.gov
A Study of Sotatercept for Patients With Eisenmenger Syndrome or Unrepaired Shunt-Associated Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Resistant to Vasodilator Therapy
An Open-label, Randomized, Controlled Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Sotatercept Add-on Therapy Compared to Standard PAH Therapy With Pulmonary Vasodilators for Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Associated With Pulmonary Vasodilator-resistant, Unrepaired Congenital Shunts (ASD, VSD, PDA) Including Eisenmenger Syndrome:SuMILE Trial
A Study of Sotatercept for Patients With Eisenmenger Syndrome or Unrepaired Shunt-Associated Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Resistant to Vasodilator Therapy (NCT07356778) is a Phase 4 interventional studying Eisenmenger Syndrome and Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension of Congenital Heart Disease, sponsored by Kazuya Hosokawa. RECRUITING as of the most recent ClinicalTrials.gov update. Talk to your doctor before contacting the trial site.
About This Trial
What is this study about? This study will test whether adding sotatercept to usual medicines for pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) can help adults who have PAH due to unrepaired congenital heart defects (atrial or ventricular septal defect, or patent ductus arteriosus), including Eisenmenger syndrome. These conditions often cause long-standing changes in the lung blood vessels and low oxygen levels. Who can join? About 36 adults (age ≥18 years) in Japan whose PAH has not improved enough with pulmonary vasodilators may join. People with very severe symptoms (WHO class IV) or other serious illnesses will not be enrolled. What will happen if I join? Participants will be randomly assigned (like a coin flip, in a 2:1 ratio) to: Sotatercept + vasodilator-based PAH care, or vasodilator-based PAH care alone. The study lasts 24 weeks. Those who receive sotatercept will have injections every 3 weeks. All participants will have clinic visits and tests at the start, week 12, and week 24, including a 6-minute walk test (how far you can walk in 6 minutes), blood tests, questionnaires, and other heart-lung assessments used in routine PAH care. What are the possible benefits? Sotatercept improved exercise capacity and heart-lung measures in other PAH studies, but people with unrepaired heart defects were not included. This study may or may not help you directly, but it may help doctors learn how to use sotatercept safely in this group. What are the possible risks? Side effects seen with sotatercept include increase in haemoglobin, low platelets, nosebleeds, telangiectasia (small dilated blood vessels), bleeding, and blood clots. People with Eisenmenger syndrome can have both bleeding (for example, haemoptysis) and clotting risks. The study will check complete blood counts (CBC) regularly and adjust or pause dosing using label-based rules. Other risks are those of standard PAH care and blood tests. Time and location The study is conducted at multiple hospitals in Japan. Study participation lasts about 6 months. Costs and payments The study drug and study-specific tests will be provided at no cost. Usual medical care not required by the study will follow each hospital's standard billing. There is no required payment to join. Any travel reimbursement or stipends will follow site policy. Privacy Your information will be kept confidential. Results will be shared in journals and at meetings without using your name. Who to contact If you are interested or have questions, please contact the study team at the participating hospital.
What Stage of Research Is This?
Phase 4 studies happen after a treatment has been approved by the FDA. They monitor long-term safety, real-world effectiveness, and any rare side effects that only emerge in larger populations over longer periods. Phase 4 results sometimes lead to label changes, additional warnings, or — rarely — withdrawal of approval.
This trial is currently recruiting participants. The sponsor has registered the study with ClinicalTrials.gov as actively enrolling, which means new applicants who meet the eligibility criteria can be considered for screening. Trial status can change between updates — confirm current recruiting status with the study contact before traveling for a screening visit.
With a target enrollment of 36 participants, this is a small study — typical of early-phase research, rare-disease trials, or pilot studies designed to generate preliminary signal before a larger study is launched.
Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)
These are translations of the protocol\'s inclusion and exclusion criteria, simplified for patients and caregivers. The original clinical text appears below. Eligibility is ultimately confirmed by the trial site\'s screening process — this summary is a starting point for a conversation with your doctor, not a final determination.
Original Eligibility Criteria
View original clinical language
Treatments Being Tested
Sotatercept
Sotatercept will be administered subcutaneously every 3 weeks for 24 weeks (total 8 injections): 0.3 mg/kg lead-in at Visit 1, then 0.7 mg/kg from Visit 2 if safety criteria are met. Dose holds/reductions follow label-concordant rules based on complete blood count (CBC) prior to each dose (e.g., hemoglobin rise \>4.0 g/dL from baseline; or \>2.0 g/dL from the previous dose and above ULN; or \>2.0 g/dL above ULN; and platelet count \<50,000/µL). Participants continue stable background PAH therapy (endothelin, nitric-oxide, prostacyclin pathways) per protocol; initiation or up-titration of PAH drugs during the 24-week treatment period is generally not permitted unless clinically mandated for safety and recorded as a protocol deviation.
vasodilator-based PAH therapy
Participants receive no sotatercept. They continue site-standard, stable PAH therapy for 24 weeks (endothelin receptor antagonist, PDE5 inhibitor/riociguat, and/or prostacyclin class as clinically indicated). Changes to background therapy are discouraged during the 24-week period unless required for safety; any changes are captured for analysis. The same visit schedule and assessments (e.g., 6-minute walk test, biomarkers, clinical events) apply as in the sotatercept arm.
Locations (10)
Trial sites listed on ClinicalTrials.gov for this study. Site activation status can vary — confirm with the specific site before traveling for a screening visit.
How to Talk to Your Doctor About This Trial
Bring the printable summary of this trial — including the NCT ID (NCT07356778), the sponsor (Kazuya Hosokawa), and the key eligibility criteria — to your next appointment. Your doctor can review the inclusion and exclusion criteria against your medical history, lab values, and current treatments to assess whether you are likely to qualify. They can also help you weigh whether trial participation makes sense alongside your existing care plan.
Useful questions to walk through together: What does the trial protocol require beyond standard care? How long is the active treatment phase, and how long is follow-up? Are there study visits at sites I can reach? Who pays for the trial-specific procedures, and who pays for standard-of-care portions? See our 25 questions to ask about clinical trials guide for a more complete checklist.
Authoritative Sources
The official record for this trial lives on ClinicalTrials.gov — the federal registry maintained by the National Library of Medicine at NIH. For background on how this trial fits into the FDA approval pathway, see the FDA drug approval process. For oncology-specific guidance for patients considering trials, the National Cancer Institute publishes patient-oriented overviews. International trial registries are aggregated by the WHO ICTRP.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the NCT07356778 clinical trial studying?
What is this study about? This study will test whether adding sotatercept to usual medicines for pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) can help adults who have PAH due to unrepaired congenital heart defects (atrial or ventricular septal defect, or patent ductus arteriosus), including Eisenmenger syndrome. These conditions often cause long-standing changes in the lung blood vessels and low oxygen levels. Who can join? About 36 adults (age ≥18 years) in Japan whose PAH has not improved enough with pulmonary vasodilators may join. People with very severe symptoms (WHO class IV) or other serious … The full protocol is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov and includes the primary outcome measures, eligibility criteria, and study endpoints.
Who can participate in NCT07356778?
Eligibility for this trial depends on the specific inclusion and exclusion criteria set by the sponsor. The plain-English summary above translates the most important criteria into accessible language; the official clinical text is preserved in the collapsible section underneath. Whether you fit any specific trial is a medical decision your doctor needs to confirm — bring the trial information to your treating physician for a full review against your medical history.
How do I contact the trial site for NCT07356778?
Contact information registered with ClinicalTrials.gov is shown in the sidebar of this page. Before reaching out, confirm with your treating physician that this trial is appropriate for your situation. The trial site will then walk you through the screening process to determine final eligibility.
Is participating in a clinical trial safe?
Clinical trials in the United States are regulated by the FDA and overseen by Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) that review the protocol for safety. Risk varies by trial — Phase 1 studies test new treatments in humans for the first time, while Phase 3 trials use treatments that have already passed earlier safety screening. The informed consent document for any specific trial details the known risks and what to expect. Discuss those risks with your physician before deciding whether to participate.
Where can I verify the data on this page?
Every detail on this page comes directly from the ClinicalTrials.gov API. Click "View on ClinicalTrials.gov" in the sidebar to see the official, unmodified record. The federal record is always authoritative; this page is a structured presentation with a plain-English eligibility translation. For background on how clinical trials are regulated, see the FDA drug approval process documentation.
How This Page Is Built
Every field on this page is pulled directly from the ClinicalTrials.gov API v2 — no estimates, no proxies. The plain-English eligibility translation is generated from the original protocol text and reviewed for fidelity to the underlying clinical criteria. The original clinical text remains visible in the collapsible section above so users and clinicians can verify the translation. Read the full methodology for the data pipeline and known limitations.
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov API v2 record for NCT07356778. Maintained by the National Library of Medicine at NIH. Public domain. Cite as: "TrialFinderData. NCT07356778. Data: ClinicalTrials.gov."
Medical disclaimer: This page is informational, not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.
Last updated 2026-05-08 · Data from ClinicalTrials.gov.