Central Retinal Artery Occlusion Clinical Trial
Official title:
Early Reperfusion Therapy With Intravenous Alteplase for Recovery of VISION in Acute Central Retinal Artery Occlusion
Non-arteritic, thromboembolic central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO) is an acute neurovascular-ophthalmological emergency which leads to severe and permanent vision loss; no evidence-based therapy does exist. Two recent meta-analyses indicate early intravenous thrombolysis to be beneficial in CRAO. Therefore, the REVISION randomized placebo-controlled interventional trial will investigate intravenous alteplase in CRAO as it is practiced in acute ischemic stroke, i.e. within 4.5 hours after symptom onset. The REVISION observational study will evaluate retinal changes on optical coherence tomography (OCT) in patients within 12 hours of CRAO onset, and the REVISION substudy, which will be conducted adjunct to either the interventional or the observational study, will evaluate the value of the retrobulbar spot sign for prediction of outcome and treatment response.
Non-arteritic, thromboembolic central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO) is an acute neurovascular-ophthalmological emergency which leads to severe and permanent vision loss in the affected eye in ~ 95% of cases. Despite a variety of widely practiced "conservative standard treatments", such as hemodilution, ocular massage, and paracentesis, there is no evidence-based therapy for non-arteritic CRAO. Animal models have proven a limited ischemic tolerance of the retina with irreversible damage occurring within only four hours after disruption of blood flow. This is why rapid reperfusion represents THE logical therapeutic approach. Two recent meta-analyses indicate early intravenous thrombolysis to be beneficial in CRAO. Therefore, the REVISION trial will investigate intravenous alteplase in CRAO as it is practiced in acute ischemic stroke, i.e. within 4.5 hours after symptom onset. Sequential evaluation by optical coherence tomography (OCT) will visualize dynamic ischemic changes of the retina during and after CRAO. The REVISION observational study will enroll patients within 12 hours of symptom onset and aims at comparing late time window retinal findings to early ischemic changes found in patients of the randomized REVISION interventional trial. Ultimately, OCT may become the preferred tool when it comes to assess retinal tissue viability in patients with an unknown CRAO onset (e.g. wake-up CRAO), and CRAO patients who present in an extended time window beyond 4.5 hours. The REVISION substudy, which will be conducted adjunct to either the interventional or the observational study, will evaluate the value of the retrobulbar spot sign for prediction of outcome and treatment response. ;
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