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Endovascular thrombectomy versus standard bridging thrombolytic with endovascular thrombectomy within 4ยท5 h of stroke onset: an open-label, blinded-endpoint, randomised non-inferiority trial

Authors :
Peter J Mitchell
Bernard Yan
Leonid Churilov
Richard J Dowling
Steven J Bush
Andrew Bivard
Xiao Chuan Huo
Guoqing Wang
Shi Yong Zhang
Mai Duy Ton
Dennis J Cordato
Timothy J Kleinig
Henry Ma
Ronil V Chandra
Helen Brown
Bruce C V Campbell
Andrew K Cheung
Brendan Steinfort
Rebecca Scroop
Kendal Redmond
Ferdinand Miteff
Yan Liu
Dang Phuc Duc
Hal Rice
Mark W Parsons
Teddy Y Wu
Huy-Thang Nguyen
Geoffrey A Donnan
Zhong Rong Miao
Stephen M Davis
Patricia Desmond
Nawaf Yassi
Henry Zhao
Cameron Williams
Fana Alemseged
Felix C Ng
Vignan Yogendrakumar
Peter Bailey
Laetitia De Villiers
Thanh Phan
Tharani Thirugnanachandran
Winston Chong
Hamed Asadi
Lee Anne Slater
Nathan Manning
Jason Wenderoth
Alan McDougall
Cecilia Cappelen-Smith
Justin Whitley
Leon Edwards
Carlos Garcia Esperon
Neil Spratt
Elizabeth Pepper
Chris Levi
Ken Faulder
Timothy Harrington
Martin Krause
Michael Waters
John Fink
Gaoting Ma
Xiangpeng Shen
Xiangkong Song
Yonglei Gao
Nam Guangxian
Zaiyu Guo
Heliang Zhang
Hongxing Han
Hao Wang
Geng Liao
Zhenyu Zhang
Chaomao Li
Zhi Yang
Chuwei Cai
Chuming Huang
Yifan Hong
Source :
The Lancet. 400:116-125
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

The benefit of combined treatment with intravenous thrombolysis before endovascular thrombectomy in patients with acute ischaemic stroke caused by large vessel occlusion remains unclear. We hypothesised that the clinical outcomes of patients with stroke with large vessel occlusion treated with direct endovascular thrombectomy within 4·5 h would be non-inferior compared with the outcomes of those treated with standard bridging therapy (intravenous thrombolysis before endovascular thrombectomy).DIRECT-SAFE was an international, multicentre, prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint trial. Adult patients with stroke and large vessel occlusion in the intracranial internal carotid artery, middle cerebral artery (M1 or M2), or basilar artery, confirmed by non-contrast CT and vascular imaging, and who presented within 4·5 h of stroke onset were recruited from 25 acute-care hospitals in Australia, New Zealand, China, and Vietnam. Eligible patients were randomly assigned (1:1) via a web-based, computer-generated randomisation procedure stratified by site of baseline arterial occlusion and by geographic region to direct endovascular thrombectomy or bridging therapy. Patients assigned to bridging therapy received intravenous thrombolytic (alteplase or tenecteplase) as per standard care at each site; endovascular thrombectomy was also per standard of care, using the Trevo device (Stryker Neurovascular, Fremont, CA, USA) as first-line intervention. Personnel assessing outcomes were masked to group allocation; patients and treating physicians were not. The primary efficacy endpoint was functional independence defined as modified Rankin Scale score 0-2 or return to baseline at 90 days, with a non-inferiority margin of -0·1, analysed by intention to treat (including all randomly assigned and consenting patients) and per protocol. The intention-to-treat population was included in the safety analyses. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03494920, and is closed to new participants.Between June 2, 2018, and July 8, 2021, 295 patients were randomly assigned to direct endovascular thrombectomy (n=148) or bridging therapy (n=147). Functional independence occurred in 80 (55%) of 146 patients in the direct thrombectomy group and 89 (61%) of 147 patients in the bridging therapy group (intention-to-treat risk difference -0·051, two-sided 95% CI -0·160 to 0·059; per-protocol risk difference -0·062, two-sided 95% CI -0·173 to 0·049). Safety outcomes were similar between groups, with symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage occurring in two (1%) of 146 patients in the direct group and one (1%) of 147 patients in the bridging group (adjusted odds ratio 1·70, 95% CI 0·22-13·04) and death in 22 (15%) of 146 patients in the direct group and 24 (16%) of 147 patients in the bridging group (adjusted odds ratio 0·92, 95% CI 0·46-1·84).We did not show non-inferiority of direct endovascular thrombectomy compared with bridging therapy. The additional information from our study should inform guidelines to recommend bridging therapy as standard treatment.Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and Stryker USA.

Details

ISSN :
01406736
Volume :
400
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....495ed3db99c8b0a7684f3b6cc83b2844
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(22)00564-5