| Literature DB >> 29171359 |
Werner Hacke1, Patrick Lyden2, Jonathan Emberson3,4, Colin Baigent3,4, Lisa Blackwell3,4, Gregory Albers5, Erich Bluhmki6, Thomas Brott7, Geoffrey Cohen8, Stephen M Davis9, Geoffrey A Donnan10, James C Grotta11, George Howard12, Markku Kaste13,14, Masatoshi Koga15, Rüdiger von Kummer16, Maarten G Lansberg5, Richard I Lindley17, Jean-Marc Olivot18,19, Mark Parsons20, Peter Ag Sandercock21, Danilo Toni22, Kazunori Toyoda15, Nils Wahlgren23, Joanna M Wardlaw8, William N Whiteley8, Gregory Del Zoppo24, Kennedy R Lees25.
Abstract
Background The recommended maximum age and time window for intravenous alteplase treatment of acute ischemic stroke differs between the Europe Union and United States. Aims We compared the effects of alteplase in cohorts defined by the current Europe Union or United States marketing approval labels, and by hypothetical revisions of the labels that would remove the Europe Union upper age limit or extend the United States treatment time window to 4.5 h. Methods We assessed outcomes in an individual-patient-data meta-analysis of eight randomized trials of intravenous alteplase (0.9 mg/kg) versus control for acute ischemic stroke. Outcomes included: excellent outcome (modified Rankin score 0-1) at 3-6 months, the distribution of modified Rankin score, symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage, and 90-day mortality. Results Alteplase increased the odds of modified Rankin score 0-1 among 2449/6136 (40%) patients who met the current European Union label and 3491 (57%) patients who met the age-revised label (odds ratio 1.42, 95% CI 1.21-1.68 and 1.43, 1.23-1.65, respectively), but not in those outside the age-revised label (1.06, 0.90-1.26). By 90 days, there was no increased mortality in the current and age-revised cohorts (hazard ratios 0.98, 95% CI 0.76-1.25 and 1.01, 0.86-1.19, respectively) but mortality remained higher outside the age-revised label (1.19, 0.99-1.42). Similarly, alteplase increased the odds of modified Rankin score 0-1 among 1174/6136 (19%) patients who met the current US approval and 3326 (54%) who met a 4.5-h revised approval (odds ratio 1.55, 1.19-2.01 and 1.37, 1.17-1.59, respectively), but not for those outside the 4.5-h revised approval (1.14, 0.97-1.34). By 90 days, no increased mortality remained for the current and 4.5-h revised label cohorts (hazard ratios 0.99, 0.77-1.26 and 1.02, 0.87-1.20, respectively) but mortality remained higher outside the 4.5-h revised approval (1.17, 0.98-1.41). Conclusions An age-revised European Union label or 4.5-h-revised United States label would each increase the number of patients deriving net benefit from alteplase by 90 days after acute ischemic stroke, without excess mortality.Entities:
Keywords: Alteplase; European Union; United States; acute ischemic stroke; acute stroke therapy; meta-analysis; rt-PA; thrombolysis
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29171359 DOI: 10.1177/1747493017744464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Stroke ISSN: 1747-4930 Impact factor: 5.266