| Literature DB >> 23431440 |
Ioannis Siasios1, Eftychia Z Kapsalaki, Kostas N Fountas.
Abstract
Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage- (aSAH-) associated vasospasm constitutes a clinicopathological entity, in which reversible vasculopathy, impaired autoregulatory function, and hypovolemia take place, and lead to the reduction of cerebral perfusion and finally ischemia. Cerebral vasospasm begins most often on the third day after the ictal event and reaches the maximum on the 5th-7th postictal days. Several therapeutic modalities have been employed for preventing or reversing cerebral vasospasm. Triple "H" therapy, balloon and chemical angioplasty with superselective intra-arterial injection of vasodilators, administration of substances like magnesium sulfate, statins, fasudil hydrochloride, erythropoietin, endothelin-1 antagonists, nitric oxide progenitors, and sildenafil, are some of the therapeutic protocols, which are currently employed for managing patients with aSAH. Intense pathophysiological mechanism research has led to the identification of various mediators of cerebral vasospasm, such as endothelium-derived, vascular smooth muscle-derived, proinflammatory mediators, cytokines and adhesion molecules, stress-induced gene activation, and platelet-derived growth factors. Oral, intravenous, or intra-arterial administration of antagonists of these mediators has been suggested for treating patients suffering a-SAH vasospam. In our current study, we attempt to summate all the available pharmacological treatment modalities for managing vasospasm.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23431440 PMCID: PMC3572649 DOI: 10.1155/2013/571328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Res Int ISSN: 2090-1860
Summary of clinical data regarding ET-1 antagonists in managing cerebral vasospasm.
| Authors/year of publication | Type of study | Number of patients | Results of the study |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Macdonald et al. (2008) [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase-II dose-finding trial | 413 patients | Reduction of vasospasm in a dose-dependent fashion from 66% in the placebo group to 23% in the 15 mg/h clazosentan group (risk reduction, 65%; 95% CI, 47% to 78%; |
|
| |||
| Macdonald et al. (2011) [ | Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase-III trial | Clazosentan group (5 mg/h, | The primary endpoint was met in 161 patients (21%) of the clazosentan group and in 97 patients (25%) of the placebo group. Relative risk reduction 17%, (95% CI −4 to 33; |
|
| |||
| Macdonald et al. (2012) [ | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase-III trial | CONSCIOUS-3 was halted prematurely following the completion of the CONSCIOUS-2. A total of 577/1500 of planned patients were enrolled, and 571 were treated (placebo, | The primary endpoint was reached in 50/189 of placebo-treated patients (27%), compared with 47/194 patients (24%) treated with clazosentan 5 mg/h and 28/188 patients (15%) treated with clazosentan 15 mg/h. Poor outcome (extended Glasgow Outcome Scale score ≤ 4) occurred in 24% of patients in the placebo group, 25% of patients with clazosentan 5 mg/h, and 28% of patients with clazosentan 15 mg/h. Mortality was 6%, 4%, and 6% with placebo, clazosentan 5 mg/h, and clazosentan 15 mg/h, respectively. Clazosentan-associated complications were pulmonary complications, anemia, and hypotension |
Summary of clinical data regarding magnesium sulphate in managing cerebral vasospasm.
| Authors/year of publication | Type of study | Number of patients | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brewer et al. (2001) [ | Prospective | 14 patients (11 women, 3 men; mean age: 58 years) | Four patients developed cerebral vasospasm. Doubling serum magnesium levels did not affect MCA CBFV but slightly lowered mean arterial blood pressure and systemic vascular resistance. Intravenous magnesium bolus did not reduce elevated CBFV in the subset of SAH patients with clinical vasospasm. |
|
| |||
| Chia et al. (2002) [ | Prospective | 23 patients divided into 2 groups. An Mg++ receiving and a control group | 7 out of 10 patients who did not receive magnesium developed vasospasm requiring intra-arterial papaverine, compared with only 2 of 13 patients among the Mg++ group |
|
| |||
| Barile et al. (2003) [ | Case report | 1 patient | Continuous infusion in order to achieve serum magnesium levels in the range of 4–4.5 mg/dL (1.65–1.85 mmol/L) resulted in a marked decrease (12.2%) of the left MCA mean blood flow velocity. |
|
| |||
| Collignon et al. (2004) [ | Prospective | 128 consecutive patients | There was no significant difference in mean, minimum, or maximum serum magnesium levels between patients with and without DIND (1.93, 1.83, and 2.02 versus 1.91, 1.84, and 1.97 mg/dL, resp.,). Similarly, no difference was found in mean serum magnesium levels among patients with severe (1.94 mg/dL), moderate (1.92 mg/dL), or no DIND (1.91 mg/dL). |
|
| |||
|
Lees et al. (2004) [ | Randomized, placebo-controlled study | 2589 patients | Primary outcome was not improved by magnesium (odds ratio 0.95, 95% CI 0.80–1.13, |
|
| |||
| Chan et al. (2005) [ | Randomized, prospective study | 18 patients | Magnesium infusion increased PtO2 by 34%. Following temporary artery occlusion, PtO2 and pH decreased and PtCO2 increased in both groups. However, tissue hypoxia was less severe, and the rate of PtO2 decline was slower in the magnesium group. |
|
| |||
| Prevedello et al. (2006) [ | Prospective | 72 patients, group A placebo, group B Mg++ | In group A, vasospasm was correlated with a longer hospitalization time, different from group B, in which patients with vasospasm receiving magnesium sulfate required less hospitalization time ( |
|
| |||
| Yahia et al. (2005) [ | Prospective, pilot study | 19 patients (mean age: 55 years; range: 39–84 years; 11 males, 8 females) | Vasospasm was observed in 9 patients (by clinical examination in two, TCD in five, and angiogram in nine). The mean serum Mg level was 2.7 mM/L and was maintained during the infusion period. No clinical adverse effects, hemodynamic changes, or fluctuations in serum glucose or phenytoin. None of the patients died. No CT evidence of ischemic infarction. Most patients had good outcomes (GOS 5 in 10 patients; GOS 4 in 8 patients). |
|
| |||
| Boet et al. (2005) [ | Randomized, double-blind study | 45 patients receive either MgSO4 80 mmol/day or saline infusion for 14 days | Patients receiving MgSO4 seemed to have fewer neurological deficits, better functional recovery, and an improved outcome score. However, none of these outcome variables reached a statistical significance. The incidence of cardiac and pulmonary complications in the MgSO4 group (43%) was also similar to that in the saline group (59%). |
|
| |||
| Wong et al. (2006) [ | Randomized, double-blind, pilot study | 60 patients receive either MgSO4 80 mmol/day or saline infusion for 14 days. Patients also received intravenous nimodipine | The incidence of symptomatic vasospasm decreased from 43% in the saline group to 23% in patients receiving MgSO4 infusion, but it did not reach statistical significance, ( |
|
| |||
| Stippler et al. (2006) [ | Comparative matched-cohort study | Seventy-six adults (mean age 54.6 years; 71% women; 92% Caucasian) | Symptomatic vasospasm was present at a significantly lower frequency in patients who received MgSO4 infusion (18%) compared with patients who did not receive MgSO4 (42%) ( |
|
| |||
| Muroi et al. (2008) [ | Prospective, randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled study | 58 patients; 27 received placebo and 31 MgSO4 | The difference in the occurrence of DIND and secondary infarction was not significant. The intention-to-treat analysis revealed a trend toward a better outcome ( |
|
| |||
| Zhao et al. (2009) [ | Meta-analysis study | Five previously published clinical studies | The occurrence of poor outcome (death, vegetative state, or dependency) in patients treated with magnesium sulfate was less likely than control group patients (odds ratio (OR) 0.54 (95% confidence interval, CI 0.36–0.81)). Mortality rates did not differ between magnesium sulfate (14%) and control treated (12%) patients (OR 1.16 (95% CI 0.51–2.65)). |
|
| |||
| Wong et al. (2010) [ | Prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled study | Of the 327 patients recruited, 169 were randomized to receive treatment with i.v. MgSO4 and 158 to receive saline (placebo) | The results do not support a clinical benefit from intravenous magnesium sulfate infusion. |
|
| |||
| Westermaier et al. (2010) [ | Prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled study | 110 patients receive i.v. MgSO4 or placebo | The incidence of delayed ischemic infarction was significantly lower in magnesium-treated patients (22% versus 51%; |
|
| |||
|
Suarez (2011) [ | Review study | Seventeen articles were identified and reviewed, including one phase-III randomized-controlled clinical trial and six phase-II randomized-controlled trials | Due to inconsistently reported benefits and the occurrence of side effects, phase-II data suggested that intravenous magnesium for SAH provided either no overall net benefit or uncertain tradeoffs. Benefit was likewise not supported in the single phase-III clinical trial. |
|
| |||
| Muroi et al. (2012) [ | Prospective study | 15 patients. Eight patients were treated with standard therapy alone (group 1) and seven patients were treated with an additional, high-dose of MgSO4 (group 2) | Serum Mg++ levels in group 2 were significantly higher compared to group 1: 1.48 ± 0.04 mmol/L versus 0.90 ± 0.01 mmol/L, |
|
| |||
|
Mees et al. (2012) [ | Phase-III randomized, placebo-controlled | 1204 patients—606 patients were assigned to the magnesium group (two lost to followup) and 597 to the placebo group (one lost to followup) | 158 patients (26.2%) had poor outcome in the magnesium group compared with 151 (25.3%) in the placebo group (risk ratio (RR) 1.03, 95% CI 0.85–1.25). Their updated meta-analysis of seven randomized trials involving 2047 patients shows that magnesium is not superior to placebo for the reduction of poor outcome after aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (RR 0.96, 95% CI 0.86–1.08). |
Summary of clinical data regarding statins in the management of cerebral vasospasm.
| Authors/year of publication | Type of study | Number of patients | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tseng et al. (2005) [ | Randomized prospective study | 80 patients | The incidence of vasospasm and severe vasospasm were reduced by 32% ( |
|
| |||
| Lynch et al. (2005) [ | Randomized prospective study | 39 patients were randomized to receive either simvastatin (80 mg daily; | The highest mean middle cerebral artery transcranial Doppler velocities were significantly lower in the simvastatin-treated group (103 ± 41 versus 149 ± 47; |
Summary of clinical data regarding fasudil in the management of cerebral vasospasm.
| Authors/year of publication | Type of study | Number of patients | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iwabuchi et al. (2011) [ | Retrospective study | 90 cases; one placebo group and a fasudil group | Fasudil improved angiographic and clinical vasospasm. |
|
| |||
| Zhao et al. (2011) [ | Randomized, open trial | 63 patients received fasudil and 66 received nimodipine | The clinical outcomes were more favourable in the fasudil group than in the nimodipine group ( |
|
| |||
| Nakamura et al. (2013) [ | Prospective study | A total of 31 patients. 10 patients received nonselective intra-arterial infusion, while 10 others selective. Eleven patients were in the placebo group. | By univariate linear regression analysis, intra-arterial infusion score negatively correlated with CT score ( |
|
| |||
| Liu et al. (2012) [ | Review study | 8 studies—843 patients | The incidence rate of symptomatic and angiographically proven vasospasm in the fasudil group was only 48% of that of the placebo group. |
|
| |||
| Enomoto et al. (2010) [ | Retrospective analysis | 23 patients undergoing intra-arterial infusion of fasudil hydrochloride in 49 vessels | Intra-arterial fasudil infusion was effective for treating cerebral vasospasm. Infusion at a constant rate of 3 mg/min delivered by infusion pump improved the symptoms of cerebral vasospasm. |
Summary of clinical data regarding nicardipine prolonged release implants (NPRIs) in the management of cerebral vasospasm.
| Authors/Year of Publication | Type of study | Number of patients | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kasuya et al. (2005) [ | Prospective study | 97 patients among 125 surgically clipped patients | Four (6%) of the 69 patients treated with NPRIs and 3 (11%) of the 28 patients not treated with NPRIs developed delayed ischemic neurological deficits (DINDs). Of these patients, clinical deterioration with infarction occurred in two patients (3%). Eighty-six patients (89%) had an independent status at three months. |
|
| |||
| Barth et al. (2007) [ | Prospective study | 32 patients | The incidence of angiographic vasospasm in proximal vessel segments was significantly reduced after implantation of NPRIs (73% in the control group versus 7% in the NPRIs group). CT scans revealed a lower incidence of delayed ischemic lesions (47% in the control versus 14% in the NPRIs group). The NPRI group demonstrated more favourable modified Rankin and National Institute of Health Stroke scales scores, as well as a significantly lower incidence of deaths (38% in the control versus 6% in the NPRIs group). |
|
| |||
| Krischek et al. (2007) [ | Prospective study | 100 patients | Only seven patients developed DIND and five patients suffered cerebral infarction. Angiography performed on days 7–12 revealed no vasospasm in any of the arteries close to the site of NPRI placement. NPRI placement can completely prevent vasospasm. |
|
| |||
| Barth et al. (2009) [ | Retrospective study | 18 patients | Functional outcome improvement is associated with NPRIs. Also administration of NPRIs resulted into: lower incidence of cerebral vasospasm, decreased incidence of new infarcts, and lower morbidity. |
|
| |||
| Schneider et al. (2011) [ | Prospective controlled study | 81 patients | The incidence of vasospasm was 48%, 44% and 11% for patients after endovascular treatment, microsurgical clipping without NPRIs, and microsurgical clipping with NPRIs, respectively. New cerebral infarctions occurred in 28%, 22% and 7% of their groups, respectively. A good clinical recovery 1 year after was seen in 48%, 50% and 77% of their patients, respectively. |
|
| |||
| Thomé et al. (2011) [ | Review study | Unknown | Several clinical protocols revealed that NPRIs dramatically reduce the incidence and severity of angiographic vasospasm. They found that NPRIs resulted into reduction of cerebral infarctions, and delayed ischemic neurologic deficits. On average, the incidence of angiographic vasospasm decreased from approximately 70% to less than 10%. Efficacy seemed to be dose-dependent. |
|
| |||
| Barth et al. (2011) [ | Prospective study | 31 patients | A significant positive angiographic effect caused by NPRIs could only be observed in surgically clipped patients. |
|
| |||
| Kasuya (2013) [ | Prospective study | Unknown | Vasospasm was completely prevented in cerebral arteries by placing NPRIs adjacent to them intraoperatively. No complications were reported. |