Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Platelet Hyperreactivity to Aspirin and Stroke: A Prospective Study With Clinical Outcomes
STUDY QUESTIONS
- What is the real prevalence of platelet "resistance" to aspirin during the acute phase
of stroke and after 3 months, and 1 year, as measured using different platelet function
tests?
- Do all methods measure similar levels of resistance, or are some methods more sensitive
than others?
- Does this resistance result in a worse clinical prognosis? Is this result independent
of other variables?
OBJECTIVES
1. Hospital Phase (Acute Stroke)
- Determination, using various methods, of the prevalence of platelet
hyperreactivity in patients treated with aspirin to treat ischemic stroke (acute
phase)
- Comparison of different assessment methods and identification of the most accurate
of these
- Identification of variables that correlate with platelet hyperreactivity
2. Follow-up Phase
- Correlation between platelet hyperreactivity and important clinical outcomes at
12, 24, and 36 months
- Correlation between platelet hyperreactivity and death or dependency at hospital
discharge, at 3, 12, 24, and 36 months (Modified Rankin Scale)
- Correlation between platelet hyperreactivity and recurrent stroke of any type
- Correlation between different methods for evaluating platelet functions and
identification of the most accurate method
- Analysis of hyperreactivity over time
THE STUDY
- The study will include 200 consecutive patients seen in the emergency department of a
large, urban hospital (1500 inpatient beds) and diagnosed with stroke in the acute
phase; these patients will be treated with aspirin for an undetermined period
- The investigators will not include patients who require full anticoagulation treatment,
regardless of the cause
- Importantly, the analysis of primary and secondary outcomes will be carried out after
blinding the examiner to the results of the platelet aggregation tests
PLATELET TESTS
- Whole Blood Aggregometer, ChronoLog
- VerifyNow, Accumetrics
- PFA-100, Siemens
- Plateletworks, Helena
- Impact-R, Diamed
- Serum thromboxane B2
THE CONTEXT
Aspirin is the anti-thrombotic therapy of choice for patients in the acute or chronic phase
of vascular, cardiac, and neurological diseases, unless there is a specific indication for
sodium warfarin (for instance, cardiac thrombus, chronic atrial fibrillation, cardio-embolic
ischemic stroke). Recent studies, including some meta-analyses, suggest that 5-60% of
patients with cardiovascular disease who use aspirin show some platelet resistance to the
drug. However, the available studies include several methodological errors that make
interpretation and practical application difficult. Thus, the incidence and outcome of
platelet resistance remain poorly understood, especially in patients with ischemic stroke.
Moreover, few studies have included patients in ambulatory follow-up
THERAPY WITH ASPIRIN
The dose of aspirin to be prescribed in this study will be 300 mg orally or by nasogastric
tube once a day (assisted therapy), with first dose tomography soon after admission if the
patient has no indication of thrombolytic therapy. After the acute phase, patients will
receive aspirin at a dose of 200 mg/day. Aspirin will be administered in a "simple"
preparation (no buffer, no extended release)
ANALYSIS OF OUTCOME DURING THE HOSPITAL PHASE
The outcomes will be assessed daily during hospitalization until the patient is discharged.
The physician, the patient, and the researchers will not have access to the results of tests
for platelet function. The number of days of hospitalization will be reviewed, including the
number of days of hospitalization in the intensive care unit. Deaths will be analyzed, and
the cause of death will be described in detail in each case. Electrocardiograms will be
examined by an experienced cardiologist. Echocardiograms will be examined by an experienced
cardiologist specializing in this method. Tomography will be examined by an experienced
neuroradiologist, and resonance/resonance angiography will be evaluated by another
experienced neuroradiologist; both will be blinded to the platelet results. Outcomes will be
judged by a committee containing a neurologist, a hematologist, a neuroradiologist, a
cardiologist, and an epidemiologist, all of whom will be blinded to the results of platelet
function
MONITORING AND MANAGEMENT AFTER HOSPITAL DISCHARGE
Outcomes will be analyzed through interviews 3, 12, 24, and 36 months after the initial
neurological event, as well as with monthly telephone interviews. Potential adverse outcomes
(death, hospitalization, diagnostic tests conducted, request for treatment of any condition,
or new onset of symptoms) will be assessed in detail by the committee of investigators of
this study. During this evaluation, the doctor, the patient, and the researchers will not
have access to the results of the tests for platelet function. The outcomes will be judged
by a committee comprising a neurologist, a hematologist, a neuroradiologist, a cardiologist,
and an epidemiologist, all of whom will be blinded to platelet test results Adherence (daily
use) will be investigated in an active manner at all return visits and through monthly
telephone contact. This study will include interviews with patients and separate interviews
with families, in addition to reviews of the package of aspirin. In addition, adherence will
be assessed by measuring serum thromboxane B2.
- Monthly telephone contact with the patient and his or her family will be used to
determine whether the patient has remained stable or has had any adverse outcome (died,
needed to seek medical care, or presented new symptoms). In the presence of any such
outcomes, we will investigate the details (death certificate, report of hospital stay,
and analysis of diagnostic tests performed). In addition, we will investigate the
records and medical reports associated with any inquiries or admissions.
- The evaluation at three and twelve months will consist of a variety of tests of
platelet function; in addition, a standardized questionnaire will be administered.
Patients who do not attend the consultation will be contacted within 30 days. If the
patient still cannot attend the consultation (e.g., because of difficulty in walking),
the researcher will go to the patient's home.
SEVERE BLEEDING
- Any fatal bleeding event (all causes will be described)
- Life-threatening bleeding: a drop in hemoglobin of at least 50 g/L, hypotension
requiring inotropes (hemorrhagic shock); symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage; or
transfusion of at least 4 units of red blood cells
- Major bleeding, defined as significantly disabling (with persistent sequelae);
intraocular bleeding leading to significant loss of vision; or transfusion of 1-3 units
of red blood cells
DEFINITION OF HYPERREACTIVITY TO ASPIRIN
- For PFA-100 using a cartridge with C-EPI (collagen-epinephrine): occlusion time < 150
seconds
- Chrono-Log Model 700 Whole-Blood: above 0 Ω with 0.75 mM of arachidonic acid
- Chrono-Log Model 700 Whole-Blood: with collagen at 1 mg/L and 5 mg/L, according to the
formula 1 - (Rate of aggregation with 1 mg / Rate of aggregation with 5 mg).
Hyperreactivity will be defined for values below 0.50
- - Chrono-Log Model 700 Whole-Blood: with collagen at 1 mg/L above 10 Ω
- Plateletworks: aggregation of more than 60% with arachidonic acid will be considered
resistant
- VerifyNow Aspirin Assay (Accumetrics): ≥ 550 aspirin reaction units (ARUs)
- Impact-R (Diamed) > 3.2% platelet aggregates on the surface of the plate after
incubation with arachidonic acid
COLLECTION OF BLOOD
Blood samples will be collected on arrival at the ED (before the first dose of aspirin), on
the fifth day of hospitalization, after three months, and again after 12 months. Samples
will be collected between 9 and 12 AM after fasting overnight, except for the sample taken
on arrival at the ED. The blood will be collected from the antecubital vein, or another vein
if necessary, into bottles of citrate (3.2%; Vacuette, Greiner Bio-One) or directly into the
Plateletworks bottle kit. Samples will total approximately 20 ml. The tourniquet will not be
applied for more than 30 seconds and movement will not be allowed before or during
collection. In order to prevent platelet activation induced by collection, even with the
above precautions, the first 5 ml sample will be discarded. The bottles will be filled to
the top and gently inverted five times to obtain the correct mixture of blood with
anticoagulant. In the Plateletworks test, assays will conducted within 10 minutes of
collection; the remaining assays will be conducted within 30 minutes
AGGREGOMETRY BY MEASURING THE IMPEDANCE OF WHOLE BLOOD USING CHRONOLOG MODEL 700 AND
SOFTWARE (AGGRO/LINK-8, PA, USA)
After collecting citrated whole blood, the sample will be processed in under 30 minutes.
Whole blood will be diluted 1:1 with sterile saline (0.9%) and stimulated with one of
several reagents (Chrono-Log, 0.5 mM arachidonic acid, 1 g/L collagen, or 5 g/L collagen).
The maximum impedance will be measured using two electrodes immersed in the sample for 6
minutes and expressed as Ω.
PFA-100 (PLATELET FUNCTION ANALYZE-100, SIEMENS, USA)
Blood specimens for PFA-100® assays will be tested according to the manufacturer's
instructions. For all samples, the PFA-100® self-test procedure will be run before analysis.
Testing will be performed using citrated whole blood with collagen-epinephrine cartridges.
Whole blood will be aspirated under conditions of high shear stress through a 150-µm
aperture covered with a membrane impregnated with collagen and epinephrine. The time taken
to occlude the aperture by a platelet plug will be recorded as the closure time (measured in
seconds).
DETERMINATION OF SERUM THROMBOXANE B2 - ELISA
After collection, blood will be immediately centrifuged (+4 °C), and the plasma immediately
frozen in liquid nitrogen (-190 °C) and then transferred to a -80 °C freezer. Serum
thromboxane B2 will be measured by ELISA in duplicate according to the manufacturer's
instructions, and expressed as ng/ml.
PLATELETWORKS (HELENA CORPORATION, USA)
Briefly, after collection of blood in kits containing arachidonic acid, collagen, ADP and
EDTA, platelet counts will be made by impedance measurement (Horiba ABX, Montpellier,
France), in accordance with the standard protocol of Helena Laboratories (Helena Point of
Care ®, Texas, USA). The percentage of platelet aggregation will be calculated using the
following formula: % of aggregation = [platelets in EDTA - platelets with agonist]/
platelets in EDTA x 100
VERIFYNOW ASPIRIN, ACCUMETRICS, USA
The VerifyNow Aspirin point-of-care system (Accumetrics, San Diego, CA, USA) is based on
turbidimetric optical detection of platelet aggregation in whole blood. Whole blood will be
transferred into standard cartridges containing a lyophilized preparation of human
fibrinogen-coated beads and arachidonic acid. As aggregation occurs, the system will convert
luminosity transmittance results into aspirin reaction units (ARUs).
IMPACT-R, DIAMED, USA
Citrated blood (130 μL) will be placed in the test kit (wells) according to the
manufacturer's protocol, and subjected to shear flow using a rotating cone for 2 minutes
(1800 s-1). The wells will then be washed and stained with May Grünwald. The adhesion of
platelets to the surface will be evaluated using an image analysis system connected to the
Impact-R, and the results will be expressed as the percentage of stained area.
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
For all calculations, will be used the software IBM SPSS 21.0 for Windows (SPSS Inc,
Chicago, IL, USA). The database will be created by SPSS Data Entry Builder 4.0 using the
double entry input system.
TIMETABLE FOR IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PROJECT
Phase No. of Months Calendar Dates Trial Activities and Estimates
1. 13 03/2007 - 04/2008 Protocol Development
2. 2 05/2008 - 06/2008 Procedure Finalization
3. 5 07/2008 - 12/2008 Protocol Revision
4. 6 01/2009- 06/2009 Training
5. 12 07/2009 - 06/2010 Main trial recruitment in emergency room
6. 36 08/2009 - 06/2013 Follow-up
7. 3 07/2013 - 10/2013 Analysis and reporting.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
There is no external influence or sponsor for the survey, collection, or analysis of data.
Similarly, the statistical analysis, preparation and publication of manuscripts will be
conducted entirely by the researchers themselves, working together with epidemiologists and
statisticians of the Faculty of Medicine, USP. Companies and institutions that provided the
kits and equipment for the platelet tests will be described in presentations at conferences
and in publications
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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