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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00894803
Other study ID # P50NS04483-06
Secondary ID 00894803
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
First received May 6, 2009
Last updated March 26, 2014
Start date July 2009
Est. completion date December 2012

Study information

Verified date March 2014
Source University of Cincinnati
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Food and Drug Administration
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The primary goal of this trial is to determine if individuals with acute ischemic stroke treated with a medium dose of IV rt-PA plus IV eptifibatide started within 3 hours of symptom onset are more likely to have a better outcome than individuals treated with standard IV rt-PA alone.


Description:

The Combined Approach to Lysis Utilizing Eptifibatide and rt-PA (recombinant tissue plasminogen activator) in Acute Ischemic Stroke-Enhanced Regimen (CLEAR-ER Stroke) trial is a Phase II trial and part of the Specialized Program on Translational Research in Acute Stroke (SPOTRIAS). The overall goals of SPOTRIAS are to enhance delivery of acute stroke patient care and train acute stroke translational researchers.

Stroke most often occurs when blood flow to the brain stops because it is blocked by a blood clot. When a blood clot blocks the blood supply to the brain, parts of the brain may not get enough blood and oxygen to survive. As a result, permanent brain damage can occur, which can affect a person's ability to walk, talk, and function independently. In order to reduce the risk of permanent damage, it is important to restore blood flow to the brain as quickly as possible.

rt-PA, used alone, is already approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as treatment for patients with a stroke caused by blockage of an artery in the brain and when given within 3 hours of the onset of stroke symptoms. Eptifibatide is also already FDA-approved as a treatment for blood clots causing heart attack. The investigational aspect of this study is the use of eptifibatide for a stroke victim in combination with rt-PA.

The CLEAR Stroke Trial (NCT00250991) demonstrated that the combination of low dose rt-PA plus eptifibatide can be safely given to acute ischemic stroke patients within 3 hours of symptom onset.

The CLEAR-ER Stroke Trial is designed to provide data concerning the risks and benefits of combining eptifibatide with medium dose intravenous rt-PA in 126 acute ischemic stroke patients within 3 hours of symptom onset. Patients will be randomized to a combined intravenous medium-dose rt-PA and eptifibatide regimen, or standard dose rt-PA in a 5 to 1 ratio. This will result in a total of 105 patients treated with a combined regimen, and 21 patients treated with standard dose IV rt-PA alone.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 126
Est. completion date December 2012
Est. primary completion date October 2012
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years to 85 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Patients must have a serious measurable neurological deficit on the NIH Stroke Scale due to focal brain ischemia.

- An NIH Stroke Scale score >5 at the time the rt-PA is begun.

- Age: 18 through 85 years (i.e. candidates must have had their 18th birthday, but not had their 86th birthday).

- Intravenous rt-PA therapy must be initiated within 3 hours of onset of stroke symptoms.

Exclusion Criteria:

- History of stroke in the past 3 months.

- Previous intra-cranial hemorrhage, neoplasm, subarachnoid hemorrhage, or arterial venous malformation.

- Clinical presentation suggests a subarachnoid hemorrhage, even if initial CT scan is normal.

- Hypertension at time of treatment; systolic BP > 185 or diastolic > 110 mmHg or aggressive measures to lower blood pressure to below these limits are needed.

- Presumed septic embolus.

- Presumed pericarditis including pericarditis after acute myocardial infarction.

- Recent (within 30 days) surgery or biopsy of parenchymal organ.

- Recent (within 30 days) trauma, with internal injuries or ulcerative wounds.

- Recent (within 90 days) severe head trauma or head trauma with loss of consciousness.

- Any active or recent (within 30 days) serious systemic hemorrhage.

- Known hereditary or acquired hemorrhagic diathesis, coagulation factor deficiency; or oral anticoagulant therapy with Iinternational Normalized Ratio (INR) > 1.7.

- Baseline lab values: positive urine pregnancy test, glucose < 50 or > 400 mg/dl, platelets <100,000 /mm3, Hct (hematocrit) <25 %, or creatinine > 4 mg/dl.

- Ongoing renal dialysis, regardless of creatinine.

- If heparin has been administered within 48 hours, the patient must have a normal partial thromboplastin time (PTT).

- Arterial puncture at a non-compressible site or a lumbar puncture in the previous 7 days.

- Seizure at onset of stroke.

- Pre-existing neurological or psychiatric disease that would confound the neurological or functional evaluations.

- Other serious, advanced, or terminal illness or any other condition that the investigator feels would pose a significant hazard to the patient if rt-PA or eptifibatide therapy were initiated.

- Patients whose peripheral venous access is so poor that they are unable to have two standard peripheral intravenous lines started.

- Current participation in another research drug treatment protocol. Patient cannot start another experimental agent until after 90 days.

- Informed consent is not or cannot be obtained.

- Any known history of amyloid angiopathy.

- High density lesion consistent with hemorrhage of any degree.

- Significant mass effect with midline shift.

- Large (more than 1/3 of the middle cerebral artery) regions of clear hypodensity on the baseline CT scan. Sulcal effacement and/or loss of grey-white differentiation alone are not contraindications for treatment.

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Eptifibatide
IV Eptifibatide is an approved drug by the Food and Drug Administration as a treatment for blood clots causing heart attack and chest pain.Eptifibatide inhibits platelet aggregation by blocking activated platelets from binding fibrinogen.
rt-PA
Intravenous recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) is the only approved acute stroke therapy.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Michigan Medical Center Ann Arbor Michigan
United States Mission Hospital, Inc. Asheville North Carolina
United States Suburban Hospital Bethesda Maryland
United States Bethesda North Hospital Cincinnati Ohio
United States Good Samaritan Hospital Cincinnati Ohio
United States Mercy Hospital Mt Airy Cincinnati Ohio
United States Mercy Hospital, Western Hills Cincinnati Ohio
United States The Christ Hospital Cincinnati Ohio
United States The Jewish Hospital Cincinnati Ohio
United States University Hospital Cincinnati Ohio
United States St. Elizabeth Healthcare Edgewood Edgewood Kentucky
United States St. Elizabeth Healthcare Florence Florence Kentucky
United States St. Elizabeth Healthcare Ft. Thomas Ft. Thomas Kentucky
United States UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center Los Angeles California
United States West Virginia University Hospital Morgantown West Virginia
United States Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital New Brunswick New Jersey
United States Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania
United States University of California San Diego San Diego California
United States UCLA Medical Center Santa Monica Santa Monica California
United States Washington Hospital Center Washington District of Columbia

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Cincinnati National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (2)

Barreto AD, Pedroza C, Grotta JC. Adjunctive medical therapies for acute stroke thrombolysis: is there a CLEAR-ER choice? Stroke. 2013 Sep;44(9):2377-9. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.113.001830. Epub 2013 Jul 25. — View Citation

Pancioli AM, Adeoye O, Schmit PA, Khoury J, Levine SR, Tomsick TA, Sucharew H, Brooks CE, Crocco TJ, Gutmann L, Hemmen TM, Kasner SE, Kleindorfer D, Knight WA, Martini S, McKinney JS, Meurer WJ, Meyer BC, Schneider A, Scott PA, Starkman S, Warach S, Brode — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Serious Systemic Bleeding Incidence of serious systemic bleeding defined as requiring transfusion of 2 or more units of packed red blood cells. Within 7 days of treatment onset Yes
Other Symptomatic Intracranial Hemorrhage (sICH) Within 7 Days of Treatment Onset Any ICH related to a decline in neurologic status or the development of new neurologic symptoms which in the judgment of the clinical investigator was related to the ICH. Judgment of significant neurological decline was made by the local clinical investigator Within 7 days of treatment onset Yes
Other Asymptomatic Intracranial Hemorrhage (asICH) Within 7 Days of Treatment Onset Any ICH observed on CT by the study site neuroradiologist and the independent study neuroradiologist; the central reader. The ICH would not be related to a decline in neurologic status or the development of new neurologic symptoms which in the judgment of the clinical investigator was related to the ICH,where judgment of significant neurological decline was made by the local clinical investigator. A third independent reader will make the final determination if there is disagreement between the treating investigator and the central reader Within 7 days of treatment onset Yes
Other Death Within 7 Days of Treatment Onset Death due to any cause within 7 days of treatment onset Within 7 days of treatment onset Yes
Other Death Due to Stroke Within 7 Days of Treatment Onset Death due to stroke within 7 days of treatment onset. Classified by blinded clinical investigators Within 7 days of treatment onset Yes
Other NIH Stroke Scale Score (NIHSS) = 5 Study subjects with an NIH stroke scale score of = 5 at 2 hours from treatment onset, those sedated and unable to be evaluated by the NIHSS were assigned the "bad" outcome (n=1).
The NIH stroke scale score is scale based on 15 items individually scored between 0-2, 0-3 or 0-4 depending upon the item. The individual items are summed to produce a score between 0 and 42, where 0 indicates no deficit and 42 indicates death.
Within 2 hours of treatment onset No
Other NIH Stroke Scale Score (NIHSS) = 2 Study subjects with an NIH stroke scale score of = 2 at 24 hours from treatment onset, those dead (n=1) or sedated and unable to be evaluated by the NIHSS were assigned the "bad" outcome (n=5).
The NIH stroke scale score is scale based on 15 items individually scored between 0-2, 0-3 or 0-4 depending upon the item. The individual items are summed to produce a score between 0 and 42, where 0 indicates no deficit and 42 indicates death.
Within 24 hours of treatment onset No
Other NIH Stroke Scale Score (NIHSS) =2 at 90 Days Study subjects with an NIH stroke scale score = 2 points at 90 days from treatment onset compared to baseline value, those dead or unable to be evaluated by the NIHSS were assigned the "bad" outcome.
The NIH stroke scale score is scale based on 15 items individually scored between 0-2, 0-3 or 0-4 depending upon the item. The individual items are summed to produce a score between 0 and 42, where 0 indicates no deficit and 42 indicates death.
90 days from treatment onset No
Primary Symptomatic Intracranial Hemorrhage (sICH) Within 36 Hours of Treatment Onset Primary safety outcome measure - Any ICH related to a decline in neurologic status or the development of new neurologic symptoms which in the judgment of the clinical investigator was related to the ICH. Judgment of significant neurological decline was made by the local clinical investigator Within 36 hours of initiation of therapy Yes
Primary Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) Score <1 or Return to mRS Baseline Primary efficacy outcome measure - Modified Rankin Scale of 0 or 1 or return to the pre-stroke value at baseline or better. The scale was performed by a study site investigator not directly involved with acute treatment of the patient. Study subjects dead at 90 days were given a value of '6', and assigned the "bad" outcome. Also those lost to follow-up were assigned the "bad" outcome.
The Modified Rankin Score (mRS) is a 6 point ordinal scale, measuring functional status. 0 (no symptoms at all), 5 (severe disability; bedridden, incontinent, and requiring constant nursing care).
90 days from treatment onset No
Secondary Barthel Index = 95 Barthel index score of = 95. The scale was performed by a study site investigator not directly involved with acute treatment of the patient. Study subjects dead at 90 days and those lost to follow-up were assigned the "bad" outcome.
The Barthel index is a score comprised of 10 individual items. Each item may be scored 0, 5, 10 or 15; not all items use the full range of 4 possible values. The individual items are summed to produce a total score between 0 and 100; where 0 is inferior performance and 100 is optimal. A score of = 95 is usually considered excellent.
90 days from treatment onset No
Secondary Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) of 1 Glasgow outcome scale score of 1 versus greater than 1. The scale was performed by a study site investigator not directly involved with acute treatment of the patient. Study subjects dead at 90 days and those lost to follow-up were assigned the "bad" outcome.
The Glasgow Outcome Scale is scored; 1=good recovery, 2=moderately disabled, 3=severely disabled, 4=vegetative survival, 5=dead.
90 days from treatment onset No
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