Stroke, Acute Clinical Trial
Official title:
Giessen Acute Stroke Registry
The aim of the planned study project is to assess the current situation regarding the treatment of patients with stroke. Specifically, various treatment strategies are to be associated and correlated with clinical endpoints, mortality or functional outcome in order to generate arguments for or against individual aspects of therapy. The focus will be on unresolved treatment approaches in acute therapy (e.g. periprocedural management, such as blood pressure, blood glucose, temperature, or airway management, during recanalizing therapies) as well as in secondary prevention on the stroke unit or intensive care unit, such as starting point, mode, and dosage of antithrombotic therapies.
Stroke is the second leading cause of death worldwide as well as the most common cause of permanent disability (Baron 1999). In the acute phase of ischemic cerebral infarction, the goal of therapy is the rapid reopening of the occluded vessel. This should restore blood flow to the inferiorly supplied brain tissue surrounding the infarct core, the penumbra, and limit the extent of the irreversibly damaged infarct core (Astrup 1981). According to the current guidelines for acute therapy of ischemic stroke, thrombolysis with recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA) can be performed within the first 4.5 hours after symptom onset (Ringleb 2015). The safety and efficacy of this therapy is considered proven (Hacke 2008, Wahlgren 2008). Outside this "time window", the incidence of bleeding complications increases. In recent years, the efficacy of interventional reopening of an occluded vessel in combination with rt-PA or without rt-PA has additionally been demonstrated. Since the publication of the results of the landmark studies on thrombectomy (MR-CLEAN [Berkhemer 2014] ESCAPE [Goyal 2015], EXTEND-IA [Campbell 2015], SWIFT-PRIME [Saver 2015], REVASCAT [Jovin 2015]) in 2016 and a meta-analysis of these studies (Goyal 2016), this therapy is widely used in specialized centers. This intervention is also available outside the 4.5-hour time window when specialized imaging is used to visualize potentially salvageable brain tissue and thus patient selection. This can be done using perfusion imaging in computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Here, a difference ("mismatch") between cerebral regional blood flow (CBF) and cerebral regional blood volume (CBV) represents potentially salvageable tissue (CBV/CBF mismatch). Similarly, structural brain imaging with MRI cannot yet detect irreversibly damaged tissue, as diffusion-weighted sequences show ischemia shortly after symptom onset, but fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequences show ischemia after 4-6 hours (DWI-FLAIR mismatch). Also, salvageable tissue can be assumed in the presence of largely unremarkable imaging and high disease severity (clinical-imaging mismatch). Considering the risk of bleeding in larger already demarcated infarcts, systemic intravenous thrombolysis can also be added if necessary. In all mismatch situations, superiority of thrombolysis and thrombectomy has recently been demonstrated (Barow 2019). The cornerstone of stroke therapy is the stroke unit concept. Diagnostics, acute therapy, secondary prophylaxis, and early rehabilitation treatment are coordinated in a specialized stroke unit. Depending on the hospital structure, acute diagnosis and therapy may also take place in an emergency room facility. The stroke unit concept is based on structured, interdisciplinary collaboration between neurologists, neuroradiologists, internists, neurosurgeons, speech therapists, occupational and physical therapists, nursing staff and the emergency medical services. Treatment in such a stroke unit alone reduces mortality by 18-46 percent relatively (3 percent absolutely), the risk of functional dependence by 29 percent, and the need for nursing home care or total home care by 25 percent (Stroke Unit Trialists Collaboration 2007). Key mechanisms of action appear to include careful adjustment of vital signs. Deviations in body temperature, blood glucose, and blood pressure lead to worse clinical outcomes (Sandercock 2008, Langhorne 2002, Sobesky 2009). In addition, patients should be screened early for dysphagia, i.e., swallowing disorders, and nutrition should be adjusted, which is a mandatory measure on stroke units (Sobesky 2009). The background of the planned project is that although there has been an enormous increase in knowledge in the treatment of stroke patients in recent years based on prospective randomized trials (especially the establishment of thrombectomy in the acute phase as well as pioneering therapies in secondary prevention, e.g., treatment of patients with atrial fibrillation or persistent foramen ovale), many questions in the everyday practical implementation of these study results remain unresolved. The aim of this research project is to generate new evidence for or against common treatment algorithms in fields where no randomized data are available. Among other things, it will be analyzed to what extent different preclinical algorithms (e.g., drip-and-ship management (i.e., secondary transfer of acutely ill patients from external hospitals to a center for thrombectomy), intraclinical treatment pathways, and early management on stroke units and intensive care units affect outcomerelevant parameters. The overall aim is to improve the current level of evidence on the management of stroke patients by analyzing a large database of individualized patient data. The aim of the present - noninterventional and purely descriptive - project is to record treatment parameters of consecutive patients with stroke and to correlate them with clinical end points. Specifically, a retrospective evaluation of patients who were hospitalized at the Department of Neurology due to stroke between the years 2018 and 2020 will be performed first. Specifically, it is planned to first identify these patients through a controlling query. Subsequently, various clinical parameters from the routine acute phase will be collected by reviewing the in-house electronic data systems. Aspects of data protection will be observed according to the local institutional guidelines. In order to analyze the outcome of the patients, contact will be made by means of a written questionnaire sent by mail, and subsequently, if necessary, by a telephone call. By providing the enclosed patient information and patient consent, the patient or legal guardian gives consent (or refusal) to the partial aspect of the telephone interview for the purpose of recording long-term outcome. . Patients who are deceased or cannot be reached will be included in the database without recording long-term outcome. Here, no clarification is provided. In a second step, emerging aspects and treatment approaches resulting from the exploratory data analysis will also be recorded prospectively in the sense of a continuous expansion of the registry. If new approaches arise for the routine care of patients, such as adjustment of treatment algorithms, these can be evaluated first. Depending on the question, it may also be necessary to extend the period for retrospective evaluation of routine data in order to obtain a sufficient number of cases; in this case, the ethics committee will be informed. ;
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