| Literature DB >> 32456617 |
Dawei Chen1, Yanwei Yin1, Jin Shi2, Fen Yang1, Kehua Wang1, Faguo Zhao1, Wenping Li1, Bin Li3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: DL-3-n-butylphthalide (NBP) was demonstrated to increase the cerebral blood flow (CBF) in the animal models, but there are no clinic studies to verify this. We aimed to explore the effect of NBP on improving cerebral hypoperfusion caused by cerebral large-vessel stenosis.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebral atherosclerotic stenosis; Cerebral blood flow; Cerebral hypoperfusion; DL-3-n-butylphthalide; Single-photon emission computed tomography
Year: 2020 PMID: 32456617 PMCID: PMC7251861 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-020-01801-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Trial profile about patient’s recruitment, participation and attrition. CBF, cerebral blood flow; MCA, middle cerebral artery; CAS, carotid artery stenting; NBP, Dl-3-butylphthalide
Baseline characteristics of 94 patients for the efficacy analyses
| Characteristics | NBP group( | Placebo group( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 56.6 ± 11.5 | 60.6 ± 10.3 | 0.085 |
| Gender (male) | 39 (81.2%) | 32 (69.6%) | 0.188 |
| Hypertention (yes) | 38 (79.2%) | 39 (84.8%) | 0.479 |
| Diabetes mellitus (yes) | 19 (39.6%) | 22 (47.8%) | 0.420 |
| Hyperlipemia (yes) | 37 (77.1%) | 38 (82.6%) | 0.505 |
| Coronary disease (yes) | 8 (16.7%) | 12 (26.1%) | 0.265 |
| Smoking (yes) | 29 (60.4%) | 24 (52.2%) | 0.420 |
| Previous TIA/ ischemic stroke | |||
| Previous TIA | 8 (16.7%) | 9 (19.6%) | 0.600 |
| Previous ischemic stroke | 24 (50.0%) | 26 (56.5) | |
| None | 16 (33.3%) | 11 (23.9%) | |
| Methods for assessing stenosis | |||
| MRA | 35 (72.9%) | 30 (65.2%) | 0.316 |
| CTA | 1 (2.1%) | 0 (0%) | |
| DSA | 12 (25.0%) | 16 (34.8%) | |
| Unilateral or bilateral | |||
| Right side | 20 (41.7%) | 22 (47.8%) | 0.526 |
| Left side | 22 (45.8%) | 16 (34.8%) | |
| Bilateral | 6 (12.5%) | 8 (17.4%) | |
| Stenotic location | |||
| Extracranial ICA | 10 (20.8%) | 8 (17.4%) | 0.118 |
| Intracranial ICA | 23 (47.9%) | 31 (67.4%) | |
| MCA(M1 segment) | 15 (31.2%) | 7 (15.2%) | |
| Carotid stenotic degree | |||
| Severe stenosis(70–99%) | 35 (72.9%) | 40 (87.0%) | 0.090 |
| Occlusion | 13 (27.1%) | 6 (13.0%) | |
| Integrity of CoW | |||
| Integrity | 11 (22.9%) | 17 (37.0%) | 0.137 |
| Un-integrity | 37 (77.1%) | 29 (63.0%) | |
| Time of follow-up (months) | 3.7 ± 1.6 | 3.5 ± 0.9 | 0.516 |
| Discontinuation of OMT (yes) | 5 (10.4%) | 3 (6.5%) | 0.759 |
NBP Dl-3-butylphthalide, TIA transient ischemic attack, MRA magnetic resonance angiography, CTA computed tomography angiography, DSA digital subtraction angiography, ICA internal carotid artery, MCA middle cerebral artery, CoW circle of Willis, OMT optimized medical therapy
Fig. 2Comparison of rCBF outcomes in every ROI between NBP and placebo groups. There were higher percentages of ROIs with rCBF amelioration and stablization in NBP group, but higher percentages of ROIs with rCBF deterioration in placebo group (p = 0.000). CBF, cerebral blood flow; rCBF, regional CBF; ROI, regions of interest; NBP, Dl-3-butylphthalide
Comparisons of whole CBF outcomes in ipsilateral MCA territory of carotid artery system stenosis between NBP and placebo groups
| Number of ROIs with rCBF amelioration/deterioration | Group | Deterioration | Stablization | Amelioration | χ2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≥1 | NBP | 10 (20.8%) | 23 (47.9%) | 15 (31.2%) | 2.049 | 0.359 |
| Control | 15 (32.6%) | 21 (45.7%) | 10 (21.7%) | |||
| ≥2 | NBP | 1 (2.1%) | 37 (77.1%) | 10 (20.8%) | 11.362 | 0.003 |
| Control | 12 (26.1%) | 27 (58.7%) | 7 (15.2%) | |||
| ≥3 | NBP | 1 (2.1%) | 40 (83.3%) | 7 (14.6%) | 8.799 | 0.012 |
| Control | 10 (21.7%) | 31 (67.4%) | 5 (10.9%) | |||
| ≥4 | NBP | 0 (0.0%) | 43 (89.6%) | 5 (10.4%) | 6.441 | 0.015 |
| Control | 5 (10.9%) | 39 (84.8%) | 2 (4.3%) |
Definitions of whole CBF outcomes were according to the number of ROIs with rCBF amelioration/deterioration. CBF cerebral blood flow, MCA middle cerebral artery, NBP Dl-3-butylphthalide, ROI regions of interest, rCBF regional CBF
Odds ratios of NBP vs. placebo for whole CBF outcomes in ipsilateral MCA territory of carotid artery system stenosis
| Models | Adjusted factors | Wald-χ2 | OR(95%CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | None | 6.080 | 0.014 | 3.23 (1.02–8.19) |
| 2 | Demographics and atherosclerotic risk factors | 5.687 | 0.017 | 3.38 (1.24–9.19) |
| 3 | Demographics, atherosclerotic risk factors, cerebral stenotic characteristics and integrity of CoW | 5.247 | 0.022 | 3.31 (1.19–9.20) |
| 4 | Demographics, atherosclerotic risk factors, cerebral stenotic characteristics and integrity of CoW, OMT | 5.110 | 0.024 | 3.26 (1.17–9.06) |
NBP Dl-3-butylphthalide, CBF cerebral blood flow, MCA middle cerebral artery, CoW circle of Willis. Demographics included age and sex; Atherosclerotic risk factors included hypertention, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipemia, coronary disease and smoking; Cerebral stenotic characteristics included bilateral stenosis and stenotic degree. OMT = optimized medical therapy
Fig. 3The rCBF change in the ipsilateral MCA after therapy in two patients with carotid artery stenosis shown by MRA. The upper figures showed a patient in NBP group. a MRA image showed that the patient had a severe stenosis in the left MCA (white arrow). b SPECT image showed that the rCBF in the ipsilateral MCA territory (8–11 ROIs) was impaired before treatment (decreased tracer uptake compared to mirror). c SPECT image showed that the decreased rCBF became improved after treatment (increased tracer uptake compared to B). The lower figures showed a patient in placebo group. d MRA image showed that the patient had a severe stenosis in the right MCA (white arrow). e SPECT image showed that the rCBF in the ipsilateral MCA territory (2–5 ROIs) was impaired before treatment (decreased tracer uptake compared to mirror). f SPECT image showed that the decreased rCBF became further deteriorated after treatment (decreased tracer uptake compared to e). CBF, cerebral blood flow; rCBF, regional CBF; MCA, middle cerebral artery; MRA, magnetic resonance angiography; NBP, Dl-3-butylphthalide; SPECT, single photon emission computed tomography; ROI, regions of interest
Fig. 4The rCBF change in the ipsilateral MCA after therapy in two patients with carotid artery occlusion shown by DSA. The upper figures showed a patient in NBP group. a DSA image showed that the patient had a near-occlusion in the right MCA (white arrow). b SPECT image showed that the rCBF in the ipsilateral MCA territory (2–5 ROIs) was impaired before treatment (decreased tracer uptake compared to mirror). c SPECT image showed that the decreased rCBF became improved after treatment (increased tracer uptake compared to B). The lower figures showed a patient in placebo group. d DSA image showed that the patient had a complete occlusion in the right MCA (white arrow). e SPECT image showed that the rCBF in the ipsilateral MCA territory (2–5 ROIs) was impaired before treatment (decreased tracer uptake compared to mirror). f SPECT image showed that the decreased rCBF became further deteriorated after treatment (decreased tracer uptake compared to e). CBF, cerebral blood flow; rCBF, regional CBF; MCA, middle cerebral artery; DSA, digital subtraction angiography; NBP, Dl-3-butylphthalide; SPECT, single photon emission computed tomography; ROI, regions of interest
Comparisons of whole CBF outcomes in ipsilateral MCA territory of carotid artery system stenosis between NBP and placebo groups stratified by stenotic degree
| whole CBF outcomes | Severe stenosis ( | Occlusion ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NBP | placebo | NBP | placebo | |||
Deterioration n (%) | 1 (2.9%) | 11 (27.5%) | 0.009 | 0 (0%) | 1 (16.7%) | 0.037 |
Stabilization n (%) | 29 (82.9%) | 22 (55.0%) | 8 (61.5%) | 5 (83.3%) | ||
Amelioration n (%) | 5 (14.3%) | 7 (17.5%) | 5 (38.5%) | 0 (0%) | ||
CBF cerebral blood flow, MCA middle cerebral artery, NBP Dl-3-butylphthalide; The whole CBF amelioration/deterioration was defined as the numbers of ROIs with rCBF amelioration/deterioration in the patients ≥2