Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Abciximab Versus Aspirin for Prevention of Stroke Recurrence Before Endarterectomy in Symptomatic >50% Carotid Stenosis: A Pilot Study (ASTERICS)
The purpose of the present prospective, randomized, double-blind, double dummy controlled multicenter pilot study is to investigate whether abciximab, compared with aspirin, is able to reduce the rate of recurrent ischemic strokes before and during carotid endarterectomy [CEA] (primary endpoints); and the degree of carotid stenosis, number of microembolic signal (MES) counts, number of ischemic infarcts at diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) and amount of intraluminal thrombus at pathological examination (secondary endpoints) in patients with ischemic stroke due to a >50% carotid stenosis who will undergo CEA.
Prospective randomized trials have shown that carotid endarterectomy (CEA) is beneficial for
stroke prevention in symptomatic severe or moderate stenoses of the carotid artery. Medical
treatment and timing of CEA after a recent stroke due to carotid narrowing, however, remain
controversial. Prospective, placebo-controlled acute stroke trials did either not screen for
or excluded carotid stenoses. The early experience with CEA resulted in a generally accepted
policy to delay surgery for 4 to 6 weeks for fear of clinical deterioration associated with
conversion of a bland to a hemorrhagic infarction. Subsequent studies suggest that
endarterectomy need not necessarily be postponed in patients with nondisabling strokes,
which was not confirmed by Giordano. Furthermore, not all patients recover fast enough to
allow early carotid surgery for a nondisabling stroke. The risk of a recurrent stroke while
waiting 4 to 6 weeks for CEA was 9.5% in 74 prospectively studied patients and 21% in a
retrospective series of 19 patients. Similarly, 4.9% of the 103 medically treated patients
with stroke and severe carotid stenosis had recurrent ipsilateral strokes within 30 days
after entry in the NASCET trial. Analogous to coronary artery disease, carotid stenoses are
assumed to become symptomatic from plaque fissure leading to exposure of its contents to the
blood, platelet activation and thrombosis that may cause cerebral or ocular emboli and
further narrows the vessel lumen. Therefore, the administration of a drug, which reduces the
amount of carotid thrombosis and thus stabilizes the plaque would be expected to reduce the
risk of recurrent stroke and progression of carotid stenosis to occlusion, and allow to
postpone CEA. Furthermore, also intraoperative ischemic strokes due to cerebral emboli
arising from a friable plaque during dissection and cross-clamping of the carotid artery may
decrease.
Prospective percutaneous coronary revascularization trials using balloon angioplasty,
stenting and atherectomy in patients with ischemic heart disease have shown that the
addition of abciximab, a blocker of platelet glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa receptors, during
intervention reduced the rates of thrombotic complications, particularly myocardial
infarction, and death within 30 days. Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) occurred in
0.0-0.1% of 2535 patients treated with abciximab, medium-dose aspirin, low-dose heparin and
endovascular procedures. Endovascular coronary interventions disrupt or dissect the arterial
wall, which leads to exposure of plaque contents and components of the vascular wall to the
blood, resulting in platelet activation and thrombosis. Interestingly, also abciximab given
18 to 24 hours prior to intervention reduced the rate of thrombotic events suggesting some
stabilization of the coronary plaque.
A recent prospective, placebo-controlled safety and pilot efficacy trial of abciximab in 74
patients with acute ischemic stroke treated within 24 hours from symptoms onset found that
abciximab caused no symptomatic ICH and showed a trend toward a higher rate of patients with
minimal residual disability. Thus, abciximab may be an attractive therapy option to prevent
stroke recurrence in patients with embolic carotid territory stroke due to carotid stenosis.
The number of microembolic signals (MES) detected in the middle cerebral artery (MCA)
downstream to a symptomatic carotid stenosis by transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD) has
been shown to predict the stroke risk, and is dramatically reduced in patients with acute
ischemic stroke not caused by carotid artery disease during the administration of the GP
IIb/IIIa inhibitor tirofiban. These data suggest that the monitoring of MES in the MCA
distal to a symptomatic carotid stenosis before and after the administration of abciximab
may be a useful surrogate marker to assess the efficacy of this drug to prevent MES and
stroke in patients with symptomatic carotid stenosis. Diffusion-weighted MR imaging (DWI)
has a high sensitivity for detecting acute brain ischemia, and recent DWI studies have
assessed the incidence of asymptomatic ischemic brain lesions in patients who underwent CEA.
The purpose of the present prospective, randomized, double-blind, double dummy controlled
multicenter pilot study is to investigate whether abciximab compared with aspirin is able to
reduce the rate of recurrent ischemic strokes before and during CEA (primary endpoints), and
the degree of carotid stenosis, number of MES counts, number of ischemic infarcts at DWI and
amount of intraluminal thrombus at pathological examination (secondary endpoints) in
patients with ischemic stroke due to a >50% carotid stenosis who will undergo CEA.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Double-Blind, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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