Literature DB >> 23294942

Selection for delayed intravenous alteplase treatment based on a prognostic score.

Rachael L Fulton1, Kennedy R Lees, Erich Bluhmki, Gabriele Biegert, Gregory W Albers, Stephen M Davis, Geoffrey A Donnan, James C Grotta, Werner Hacke, Markku Kaste, Rüdiger von Kummer, Ashfaq Shuaib, Danilo Toni.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: Approved use of intravenous alteplase for ischemic stroke offers net benefit. Pooled randomized controlled trial analysis suggests additional patients could benefit but others be harmed with treatment initiated beyond 4·5 h after stroke onset. We proposed prognostic scoring methods to identify a strategy for patient selection.
METHODS: We selected 500 patients treated by intravenous alteplase and 500 controls from Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive, matching modified Rankin score outcomes to those from pooled randomized controlled trial 4·5-6 h data. We ranked patients by prognostic score. We chose limits to optimize our sample for a net treatment benefit significant at P = 0·01 by Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test and by ordinal regression. For validation, we had these applied to the pooled randomized controlled trial data for 4·5-6 h, testing for net benefit by Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test, ordinal regression, and also by dichotomized outcomes: modified Rankin score 0-1, mortality and parenchymal hemorrhage type 2 bleeds. All analyses were adjusted for age and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale.
RESULTS: In the training dataset, limits of 56-95 on a prognostic score retained 714 patients in whom there was net benefit significant at P = 0·01. When applied to the 1120 patients in the pooled randomized controlled trial 4·5-6 h dataset, score limits of 56-95 retained 711 patients and gave odds ratio for improved modified Rankin score distribution of 1·13, 95% confidence interval 0·87-1·47, Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel P = 0·89. More patients achieved modified Rankin score 0-1 (odds ratio 1·44, 1·02-2·05, P = 0·04) but mortality and parenchymal hemorrhage type 2 bleeds were increased: odds ratio 1·56, 1·01-2·40, P = 0·04; odds ratio 15·6, 3·7-65·8, P = 0·0002, respectively.
CONCLUSION: Selection of patients between 4·5 and 6 h based on simple clinical measures failed to deliver a population in whom the alteplase effect would be safe and effective.
© 2013 The Authors. International Journal of Stroke © 2013 World Stroke Organization.

Entities:  

Keywords:  analysis; clinical trials; outcomes; prognostic score; thrombolysis

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23294942     DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-4949.2012.00943.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Stroke        ISSN: 1747-4930            Impact factor:   5.266


  3 in total

1.  European Stroke Organisation (ESO) guidelines on intravenous thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke.

Authors:  Eivind Berge; William Whiteley; Heinrich Audebert; Gian Marco De Marchis; Ana Catarina Fonseca; Chiara Padiglioni; Natalia Pérez de la Ossa; Daniel Strbian; Georgios Tsivgoulis; Guillaume Turc
Journal:  Eur Stroke J       Date:  2021-02-19

2.  Effect of Salvia Miltiorrhiza Polyphenolic Acid Injection on Improving Limb Use and Cognitive Impairment in Patients with Acute Stroke.

Authors:  Shan Cong; Chunxue Dong; Yujiao Hu; Chunying Wang; Bingquan Zhang; Nan Li
Journal:  Comput Math Methods Med       Date:  2022-08-09       Impact factor: 2.809

Review 3.  Why not Intravenous Thrombolysis in Patients with Recurrent Stroke within 3 Months?

Authors:  Chuanjie Wu; Di Wu; Jian Chen; Chuanhui Li; Xunming Ji
Journal:  Aging Dis       Date:  2018-04-01       Impact factor: 6.745

  3 in total

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