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Treatment with intravenous alteplase in ischaemic stroke patients with onset time between 4.5 and 24 hours (HOPE): protocol for a randomised, controlled, multicentre study

Authors :
Ying Zhou
Bruce C V Campbell
Wansi Zhong
Zhicai Chen
Min Lou
Yi Chen
Lu-sha Tong
Shenqiang Yan
Xuting Zhang
Zhongyu Luo
Kemeng Zhang
Yaode He
Haitao Hu
Jiansheng Yang
Source :
Stroke and Vascular Neurology, Vol , Iss
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group.

Abstract

Background While intravenous thrombolysis is recommended for patients who had an acute ischaemic stroke (AIS) within 4.5 hours of symptom onset, there are few randomised trials investigating the benefits of thrombolysis beyond this therapeutic window.Aim To determine whether patients who had an AIS selected with the presence of potentially salvageable tissue on CT perfusion at 4.5–24 hours after stroke onset (for stroke with unknown onset time, the midpoint of the time last known to be well and symptom recognition time; for wake-up stroke, the midpoint of the time last known to be well or sleep onset and wake up time) will benefit from intravenous thrombolysis.Design HOPE is a prospective, multicentre, randomised, open-label blinded endpoint trial with the stage of phase III. The treatment allocation employs 1:1 randomisation. The treatment arm under investigation is alteplase with standard therapy, the control arm is standard therapy. Eligibility imaging criteria include ischaemic core volume ≤70 mL, penumbra ≥10 mL and mismatch ≥20%.Study outcomes The primary outcome is non-disabled functional outcome (assessed as modified Rankin Scale score of 0–1 at 90 days).Discussion HOPE is the first trial to investigate whether intravenous thrombolysis with alteplase offers benefits in patients who had an AIS presenting within 4.5–24 hours, which has the potential to extend time window and expand eligible population for thrombolysis therapy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20598696
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Stroke and Vascular Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0756d499b0ac49e7a754b86e8d6ac360
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/svn-2022-002154