Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

At the acute stage of cerebral ischaemia, the only effective drug that increases the proportion of patients who survive without dependency is thrombolytic therapy by intravenous (i.v.) tissue-plasminogen activator (t-PA). This treatment is entered into routine practice with similar results than in trials, in various places of the world including Europe and Japan.

Stroke and dementia are closely related. About one patient in ten has dementia before a first-ever stroke, and more than one in three has dementia after a recurrent stroke. Pre-existing dementia is associated with a worse outcome of stroke, and pre-existing cognitive impairment without dementia is associated with a higher rate of institutionalisation within 3 years. In many patients cognitive impairment is due to the summation of the effects of vascular and Alzheimer lesions of the brain.

More and more patients nowadays who are eligible for rt-PA are already known as demented at admission. A retrospective study conducted in a cohort of patients with dementia who had an ischaemic stroke and were treated by rtPA suggested that there is no increased risk of cerebral bleeding and death as compared with non demented patients. However, pre-existing cognitive impairment is possibly associated with (i) an increased risk of bleeding in patients with cognitive impairment, and (ii) a higher sensitivity to the neurotoxic effect of rt-PA on the brain tissue.

Japanese patients differ from European patients by a higher risk of spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage, and a higher proportion of patients with small-vessel diseases.

The primary objective of the OPHELIE-COG study is to determine whether ischaemic stroke patients who are treated with i.v. rt-PA are more likely to have a poor outcome (defined as a modified Rankin scale 2 to 6 at month 3) in the presence of pre-existing cognitive impairment or dementia. The secondary objectives are to determine whether (i) they have an increased risk of symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhages, (ii) the proportion of patients who have a poor outcome is lower than expected from the placebo group of randomised trials for patients with a similar range of baseline severity, and (iii) the influence of the cognitive state on outcome differs between Japanese and European patients.


Clinical Trial Description

The French part of OPHELIE-COG is run as an ancillary study of OPHELIE, a multicenter French study conducted in the clinical centres of the Strokavenir research network (co-PI Didier Leys, Lille and Denis Vivien, Caen). OPHELIE has been approved by the ethical committee and is an investigator-driven study supported by the INSERM, the University Lille Nord de France and the Lille University hospital. OPHELIE includes prospectively all patients who are treated by i.v. rt-PA for an acute cerebral ischaemia in the participating centres and tests the hypothesis that the single/two chain-tPA ratio in the infusion influences the 3-month outcome, evaluated by a score 0 or 1 at the modified Rankin scale(mRS). OPHELIE-COG is conducted in the same cohort of patients as an ancillary analysis of OPHELIE.

The Japanese part of OPHELIE-COG will be conducted In patients who receive i.v. rt-PA for acute cerebral ischaemia in participating Japanese centres. Japanese centres will not be part of the OPHELIE study.

No specific investigation is necessary for the purpose of the study. There is no variable recorded that is not part of the usual management of stroke patients treated by i.v. rt-PA. Following-up patients at 3 months and having mRS is recommended to monitor the results of thrombolysis in all centres able to deliver the treatment. The informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE)is not part of the care in all centres but is however highly recommended because of the influence of the pre-existing cognitive state on stroke outcome in general.

The systematic assessment of pre-existing dementia is conducted within 48 hours of stroke onset by French or Japanese translations of the short version of the IQCODE. Patients who are already followed-up by a neurologist and diagnosed as demented before stroke are classified as previously demented irrespective of the IQCODE score. Patients who cannot have an IQCODE but have a MMSE score of 30 before discharge are classified as cognitively normal. Patients who cannot have an IQCODE and have a MMSE score of 29 or less are not eligible.

The sample size calculation for the French patients has been performed for the primary objective of OPHELIE assuming an expected difference of 5% for the primary end-point with alpha and beta risks of 5% and 20% respectively and a expected proportion of patients with a mRS score 0-1 of 40% at month-3, according to trials, observational registries and data published in the Lille centre for a baseline NIH score of 11: 900 patients will be necessary. To detect an absolute difference of 10 % for the primary end-point with an alpha risk of 5% and a power of 80%, a sample size of 1040 eligible patients is necessary, assuming that 12 to 16% of patients will have criteria for pre-existing dementia. This 10% absolute difference in the proportion of patients with mRS 0-1 at month 3 between those with and without pre-existing dementia corresponds to the difference below which the beneficial effect of rt-PA may be lost, taking into account that approximately 30% of patients under placebo, and 40% under rt-PA have a mRS 0-1 at month 3 for a median baseline NIH score of 11. Assuming that 20% of patients included in OPHELIE will not be eligible for OPHELIE-COG according to the proportion of exclusions found in previous studies with the IQCODE, we can expect a recruitment of 720 patients in the French arm of the study. The 320 other patients will be recruited in Japan, meaning that 400 patients have to be recruited to compensate the usual 20% rate of patients who cannot have an IQCODE in due time.

An intermediate analysis will be performed after inclusion of 500 patients arrived at 3 months of follow-up to re-evaluate the sample size. ;


Study Design

Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01713491
Study type Observational
Source University Hospital, Lille
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 2011
Completion date March 2015

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05686486 - Gentle Gymnastics and Relationship Between Family Caregivers and Residents With Dementia in Nursing Homes N/A
Terminated NCT05451693 - Outreach-ER: A Dementia Care Intervention Program
Recruiting NCT05820919 - Enhancing Sleep Quality for Nursing Home Residents With Dementia - R33 Phase N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT06040294 - Dementia and Disability Simulation for College Nursing Students' Senior Activity Facilitation Skills N/A
Completed NCT05114187 - An Internet-Based Education Program for Care Partners of People Living With Dementia N/A
Recruiting NCT06322121 - Vascular Aspects in Dementia: Part 2
Active, not recruiting NCT03676881 - Longitudinal Validation of a Computerized Cognitive Battery (Cognigram) in the Diagnosis of Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease
Completed NCT04426838 - Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia for the Dementia Caregiving Dyad N/A
Recruiting NCT03462485 - Pilot Study of the Effects of Playing Golf on People With Dementia N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03677284 - Managing Time With Dementia: Effects of Time Assistive Products in People With Dementia N/A
Completed NCT03849937 - Changing Talk Online (CHATO) Study N/A
Recruiting NCT06284213 - Biomarkers for Vascular Contributions to Cognitive Impairment and Dementia Consortium
Recruiting NCT05579236 - Cortical Disarray Measurement in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease
Completed NCT05080777 - Pilot Pragmatic Clinical Trial to Embed Tele-Savvy Into Health Care Systems N/A
Completed NCT04571697 - A Study of Comparing Rates of Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in Participants Initiating Methotrexate Versus Those Initiating Anti-tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF)-Alpha Therapy
Completed NCT03583879 - Using Gait Robotics to Improve Symptoms of Parkinson's Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT06033066 - Financial Incentives and Recruitment to the APT Webstudy N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05204940 - Longitudinal Observational Biomarker Study
Recruiting NCT05684783 - Dementia Champions in Homecare
Completed NCT03147222 - Function Focused Care: Fracture Care at Home N/A