Hemorrhagic Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Advanced Diagnostics of Acute Stroke (Biomarkers, Blood Analysis, Stroke Scales and Cerebral CT Examinations) and Initiation of rtPa Treatment in an Air Ambulance Model
The objective of this study is to investigate the effectiveness of prehospital diagnosis and,
when appropriate, of intravenous thrombolytic treatment of ischemic stroke. At the same time,
we will take the opportunity to do an explorative study with the aim to further improve the
intervention by biomarkers, and outcome measures volumetric measured by MRI images.
The intervention study aim to:
- Determine the time from symptom onset to thrombolytic treatment in the Mobila Stroke
Unit (MSU) compared to the conventional model
- Determine the number of patients receiving thrombolytic treatment within the 4.5 hrs
window in the MSU compared to the conventional model
- Determine if thrombolytic treatment in the MSU, when adjusted for time, results in
better mRS- and Barthel outcome compared to treatment in the conventional model The
explorative study aim to
- Determine if final IS infarction volume estimated by MRI, is independently correlated
with time from symptom onset to thrombolytic treatment
- Define cut-off values for GFAP and RBP4 combined that with sufficient specificity and
sensitivity can distinguish ICH from IS
- Determine the influence of time to treatment on pro-inflammatory markers after stroke
Hypothesis Intervention study I. The Treat - NASPP MSU model is feasible and reduces onset to
treatment time less than 15 min II. The number of patient treated with thrombolysis within
4.5 hrs of symptom onset is significantly increased in the Treat-NASPP MSU model III.
Treatment in the Treat-NASPP MSU model does not result in increased day 90 mRS and Barthel as
compared to the conventional model when adjusted for time IV. Prehospital thrombolytic
treatment of stroke does not increase the risk of secondary cerebral bleeding as compared to
in-hospital thrombolytic treatment of stroke (cerebral bleeding worsening within 36 hrs less
than 4 per cent, Norsk hjerneslagregister) Explorative study V. The final infarct volume,
estimated by MRI, is significantly reduced when thrombolytic treatment is initiated already
in the MSU VI. Biomarkers is a valid tool in the hyper acute phase of cerebral illness to
exclude contraindication to thrombolysis VII. Reduced onset to treatment time results in
lower levels of selected pro-inflammatory molecules
Treat-NASPP is a prospective controlled intervention study. The main aim of this study is to
prospectively compare patients with ischemic stroke (IS) who are diagnosed and treated
prehospitally in the MSU (intervention), with those who receive conventional pre- and
inhospital diagnostics and treatment (control). At the same time we will do an explorative
study with the aim to further improve diagnostic- (the biomarker study) and outcome measures
(the biomarker study and MRI infarction volume study). The MSU will be staffed with an
anaesthesiologist, a paramedic-nurse and a paramedic while on call. On the weeks the MSU is
not operating, the data collection will take place from the conventional ambulance on
weekdays from 8 am to 8 pm. Only ambulances staffed with the paramedic-nurse and paramedic
that work as staff on the MSU will participate in the study. All emergency calls to the
central EMS dispatch center (AMK 113) from the catchment region of Ostfold county will be
screened for stroke symptoms by the EMS dispatcher according to normal procedures: they will
use the FAST scale (one or more of the following neurological deficits: paralysis of arm or
leg, facial paralysis, aphasia or dysarthria) and in regard to the inclusion criteria (listed
below) the MSU will be dispatched when the inclusion criteria are fulfilled on weeks when the
MSU is on call. The same inclusion criteria apply for the ordinary ambulance on weeks when
the MSU is not on call. The intervention (prehospital CT and thrombolytic treatment) can only
be administered in the MSU. The control (in-hospital CT and thrombolytic treatment) can only
be administered in the hospital.
MSU procedure On site the anesthesiologist will take the actual medical history and do a
rapid screening using the ABCDE`s of trauma care. If the patient is stable and further
investigations can proceed including NIHSS scoring. The patient will get two venous lines,
and blood samples will be collected. Blood samples for biomarkers (se details below) will be
stored and delivered to the laboratory at the hospital for further analyses and storage in
bio bank (related to REK 2014/1161). The patient will be taken into the stroke ambulance,
where the CT scan is performed and blood tests are run in the point of care laboratory (POC).
After completing the CT scan examination, the anesthesiologist will immediately get in
contact with the on call neurologist (stroke team) at Ostfold Hospital. The anesthesiologist
will provide the stroke team with clinical history, POC blood tests, NIHSS score, time of
symptom onset and any known clinical contraindication of thrombolysis. The stroke team and
the on call radiologist will interpret the CT scan by teleradiology and a treatment decision
will eventually be made. If indication of thrombolytic treatment the stroke ambulance nurse
will prepare and initiate iv. rtPa (Actilyse) as per protocol (appendix). The prehospital
study data will be completed in an electronic study form by the anesthesiologist.
Conventional ambulance management Conventional ambulance data collection will only take place
when the MSU is not on duty. The conventional ambulance is then staffed with the same
personnel (except the anaesthesiologis) as the MSU. After the paramedic or nurse-paramedic
has taken the patient's actual medical history, performed a physical examination including
NIHSS, established a venous line and eventually given the emergency treatment needed, the
patient will be transported to the Østfold hospital. The paramedic will contact EMS
dispatcher to inform patient inclusion in the study and the EMS dispatcher will contact the
hospital stroke team. The paramedic will withdraw a blood sample for the biomarker study, and
an additional blood sample will be taken at the hospital for standard analysis.
Therapeutic decision In both the conventional and the MSU pathway a cerebral CT scan will be
conducted as soon as possible after symptom onset. Images will in both pathways be registered
in the hospital PACS system, and interpret by the on call stroke team (neurologist and
radiologist). In the MSU pathway the anesthesiologist will decide which patients are eligible
for CT scan, but in the conventional pathway the neurologist on call in the emergency
department will make this decision. Prehospital clinical assessment will include the actual
medical history, a stroke scale score, and ABCDE evaluation. The clinical information and
scores will be completed in designated study forms, and in the specialized prehospital
patient record system AMIS. Both paramedic/nurse in the conventional pathway and the
anesthesiologist in the MSU will do a stroke scale score, and scores will be analyzed for
research purposes.
If a thrombolytic treated patient shows signs of clinical detoriation, expressed as an
increase of 4 or more points on the NIHSS scale, an intracranial hemorrhage is to be
suspected and the thrombolytic infusion must be stopped immediately. If in the MSU, a new
cerebral CT scan should be conducted if the driving distance to the hospital exceeds 20
minutes, and the CT findings should immediately be transferred and reported to the hospital.
After identification of location and distribution of damage based on the CT image, treatment
will either be initiated on site in accordance with in-hospital procedures, or the patient
will be transported directly to location for neurosurgery (see attachment 3).
Prehospital use of stroke scales: Stroke scales will be conducted in the MSU and the regular
ambulance. All participants (anesthesiologists, paramedics and nurses) will attend a two-day
course in stroke clinics, stroke treatment and the use of stroke scales. An online
certification in NIHSS will be mandatory for participation.
MR volumetric: MRI will be completed at day 1 in all included patients treated with
thrombolysis, prehospital or in hospital. Final infarct volume will be estimated by using
image-series according to standard MRI protocol at Ostfold hospital.
Biomarker All serum- and plasma samples will be stored in the bio bank related to REK
2014/2261. Venous blood for measurements of biomarkers will be drawn at very early time
points after symptom onset (i.e. after arrival of the paramedics/anesthesiologists at the
scene), and at different time points up to weeks after arrival at hospital from all patients
enrolled. The total volume of blood drawn will not exceed 100 ml on any day. All samples will
be drawn by personnel certified by Østfold hospital. One standard serum tube, one EDTA plasma
tube and one citrate serum tube will be used for blood collection. Blood samples will be
centrifuged within 2 hrs of blood collection using a standard centrifuge (10 min at
1500-2000g). Serum/plasma will be transferred immediately in aliquots to Eppendorf tubes
(each containing 0.5 ml) and stored at minus 80 degrees celcius. The Eppendorf tubes should
be labeled appropriately indicating the patient number and the tubes collected per patient.
Biomarkers will be analyzed in Professor Sandip Kanses lab, UiO, or shipped on dry ice to
Professor Christian Forch, Department of Neurology, Schleusenweg 2-16, 60528 Frankfurt am
Main, Germany. We will compare biomarker levels (index test) with CT findings (reference
standard) and optimize cut-off points by using Receiver Operating Characteristics (ROC)
analysis. Sensitivity and specificity will be calculated based on cross tabulations. The
broad range of time points will be needed to monitor the rise and fall of biomarker
concentrations, inflammatory response and diagnostic and prognostic windows in the wake of
stroke.
Data monitoring, harms and auditing An independent safety committee consisting of two
experienced stroke neurologists will review all safety data after 10, 20, 50, 100, 150 and
200 patients treated with thrombolysis. The committee will stop the study if they find
evidence for an unacceptable increase of symptomatic cerebral bleedings (more than 4%) or
deaths. Symptomatic cerebral haemorrhage is assessed as local or remote parenchymal
haemorrhage combined with a neurological deterioration of four points or more on the NIHSS
from baseline or from the lowest NIHSS value between baseline and 24 h, or a significant
clinical worsening linked to the bleeding, or a bleeding leading to death.
The over-all rate of cerebral bleeding complications and the mortality rate at seven days
will be compared with data from the Norwegian stroke register.
The main safety issues in the acute phase of stroke are linked to respiratory failure,
cardiac arrhythmias and cerebral bleeding secondary to thrombolytic treatment.
The anaestesiologists working in the MSU are highly qualified to take care of acute
respiratory and cardiac failure. The MSU is technically equipped as an air ambulance
helicopter.
The main aim of our study is to provide early thrombolytic treatment to patients with
cerebral infarction. The most serious complication of thrombolytic treatment is cerebral
bleeding which may be fatal. Up to 10 % of all patients treated with thrombolysis will have a
cerebral bleeding confirmed by CT, whereas only 2-4% of all patients will die or have a
worsened outcome due to bleeding (called symptomatic bleeding). Cerebral bleedings following
thrombolytic therapy will show up during the first few days, sometimes even in the very acute
phase. Studies with thrombolytic therapy in MSU models have, however, not shown an increased
risk of cerebral bleedings.
In-hospital cerebral bleedings will be diagnosed and treated according to the standard
routines. Patients are monitored both in the MSU and in the stroke unit with NIHSS scoring at
close intervals for 24-36 hours. At the hospital a MRI cerebral scan will be performed as a
routine at approximately 24 hours after symptom start.
Statistical analysis The Treat-NASPP is designed in accordance with the Standards of
Reporting of Diagnostic Accuracy initiative guidelines. For the prospective controlled
intervention study our primary outcome will be i) OTT time, and ii) number of patients
treated within 4.5 hours. Our secondary outcome will be mRS and Barthel at day 90 adjusted
for OTT time.
For the primary outcomes we will use the Mann-Whitney U test. For power calculation, we want
to compare two continuous variables in two groups, or compare two means. 2-sample, 2-sided
equality. If we estimate time saved by MSU-treatment (intervention) as compared to the
conventional pathway (control) we find Mean group 1: 210 minutes (29) Mean group 2: 180
minutes (we estimate 30 minutes saved in MSU) SD: 70 minutes Sampling ratio: 1 This gives us
a number n=86 patients with thrombolytic treatment in each group. As we observed a mean
reduction of time from onset of symptoms to diagnostics in the referred to NASPP study
(unpublished data, REK 2013/2298) of 100 minutes, we consider this to be achievable.
Biomarkers As we expect concentrations of biomarkers to have a skewed distribution (21, 30),
we will use the Mann-Whitney U-test when comparing concentrations in patients with ischemic
stroke and ICH. The ROC-curve analysis will be used to calculate the diagnostic accuracy of
the biomarkers in distinguishing between IS and ICH.
Sample size calculation for logistic regression is a complex problem, but based on the work
of Peduzzi et al. (31) the following guideline for a minimum number of cases to include in
the study can be suggested. Let p be the smallest of the proportions of negative or positive
cases in the population and k the number of covariates (the number of independent variables),
then the minimum number of cases to include is: N = 10 k / p. A statistician (Jo Røislien,
see working group below) will be consulted for correct data analysis.
Data storage Clinical data will be registered and stored at Ostfold Hospital Kalnes. Study
data will be un-identified and registered using the secure server provided by Teknograd
https://www.teknograd.no
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT03281590 -
Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases Registry
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06026696 -
Cohort of Neurovascular Diseases Treated in the Acute Phase and Followed at Lariboisière
|
||
Completed |
NCT01573117 -
A Randomized Trial Comparing 2 Methods for Rapid Induction of Cooling in Stroke Patients, Cold Infusions vs. RhinoChill (iCOOL 1)
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT03292211 -
The Effect of Early Mobilization in Mild to Moderate Hemorrhagic Stroke
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT06069973 -
Using Machine Learning and Biomarkers for Early Detection of Delayed Cerebral Ischemia
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05816213 -
Point-of-care Low-field MRI in Acute Stroke
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05502874 -
Multicenter Registry for Assessment of Markers of Early Neurological Deterioration in Primary Intracerebral Hemorrhage
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04534556 -
Wireless Nerve Stimulation Device To Enhance Recovery After Stroke
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04200781 -
Clinical Evaluation of Shengdi Dahuang Decoction in the Treatment of Acute Hemorrhagic Stroke
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05440682 -
Connectivity in Cranioplasty
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05121415 -
Investigation of Genetic Disease Marker Associated With Spontaneous Haemorrhagic Stroke Complicating Severe Pre-eclampsia in Pregnancy
|
||
Terminated |
NCT02626377 -
Multicenter Prospective Cohort of Informal Caregivers in Burgundy and Franche-Comté
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01942031 -
Improved Prevention of Stroke in Primary Care in Stockholm, Sweden (Förbättrad Prevention av Stroke)
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01845350 -
Safety of Autologous M2 Macrophage in Treatment of Non-Acute Stroke Patients
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05865795 -
Mapping the Natural History of Parenychymal and Cerebral Perfusion Changes in Acute Ischemic and Hemorrhagic Strokes
|
||
Completed |
NCT04612218 -
Biomarkers for Initiating Onsite and Faster Ambulance Stroke Therapies
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT06134921 -
Effects of Transcranial Electrical Stimulation in Stroke Individuals
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06190314 -
SERUM VITAMIN B12 LEVELS IN PATIENTS WITH HEMORRHAGIC VS ISCHEMIC CEREBROVASCULAR EVENT.
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05735405 -
Aerobic Exercise and Cognitive Training in Patients With Stroke
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06107725 -
Maimonides Minocycline in Stroke Study
|
Phase 2/Phase 3 |