| Literature DB >> 35260801 |
Kazunori Toyoda1, Masatoshi Koga2.
Abstract
The impact of acute therapy for intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) lags far behind that for acute ischemic stroke. Intensive blood pressure lowering is a promising therapeutic strategy for acute ICH, especially for East Asian patients whose etiological mechanism is more commonly hypertension than that of patients in the Western population. A multicenter, prospective, observational study named the Stroke Acute Management with Urgent Risk-factor Assessment and Improvement-IntraCerebral Hemorrhage (SAMURAI-ICH) study, involving 211 patients from ten Japanese stroke centers, was performed to elucidate the safety and feasibility of blood pressure lowering to 160 mmHg or less in acute ICH patients using intravenous nicardipine. When we started the study, intravenous nicardipine was not officially approved for hyperacute ICH patients in Japan. The SAMURAI-ICH study was also a pilot study to judge the feasibility of participation by many Japanese investigators in an international, randomized, controlled trial named the Antihypertensive Treatment of Acute Cerebral Hemorrhage (ATACH)-2 trial. The SAMURAI-ICH study, ATACH-2 trial, and their combined individual participant data meta-analysis produced several new interesting findings on how to control blood pressure levels in acute ICH patients. Some of the findings are introduced in the present review article.Entities:
Keywords: Aacute stroke; Antihypertensive therapy; Hemorrhagic stroke; Hypertension; Nicardipine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35260801 PMCID: PMC8923997 DOI: 10.1038/s41440-022-00866-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertens Res ISSN: 0916-9636 Impact factor: 3.872
Fig. 1Age at onset (A), initial National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale scores (B), and discharge modified Rankin Scale scores (C) of 33,178 patients with acute intracerebral hemorrhage and 125,722 patients with acute ischemic stroke from a multicenter registry between 2000 and 2018: The Japan Stroke Data Bank. Edited based on the data from Ref [2]. The National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS), a serial measure of neurological deficit, is a 42-point scale that quantifies neurological deficits in 11 categories, with a score of 0 indicating normal function without neurological deficit and higher scores indicating a greater severity of deficit. The modified Rankin scale grades the degree of disability or dependence in daily activities using scores ranging from 0 (no symptoms) to 6 (death). In Panel (B), the boxes represent the interquartile ranges, the lines across the boxes indicate the median values, and the whiskers represent the 10th percentile and 90th percentile values
Participating institutions in SAMURAI-ICH and ATACH-2 from Japan
| SAMURAI | ATACH-2 | Institution | Site principal investigators |
|---|---|---|---|
| ○ | ○ | National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center | Kazunori Toyoda, Kazuyuki Nagatsuka |
| ○ | ○ | Kobe City Medical Center General Hospital | Hiroshi Yamagami, Nobuyuki Sakai |
| ○ | ○ | Nakamura Memorial Hospital | Jyoji Nakagawara, Kenji Kamiyama |
| ○ | ○ | NHO Nagoya Medical Center | Satoshi Okuda |
| ○ | ○ | NHO Kyushu Medical Center | Yasushi Okada |
| ○ | ○ | Kohnan Hospital | Eisuke Furui, Ryo Itabashi |
| ○ | ○ | Kyorin University Hospital | Yoshiaki Shiokawa, Kazutoshi Nishiyama |
| ○ | ○ | St. Marianna University Hospital | Yasuhiro Hasegawa, Hisanao Akiyma |
| ○ | ○ | Kawasaki Medical School Hospital | Kazumi Kimura, Yoshiki Yagita |
| ○ | Jichi Medical University School of Medicine | Kazuomi Kario, Michito Namekawa | |
| Toranomon Hospital | Takayuki Hara | ||
| Gifu University Hospital | Toru Iwama | ||
| Saiseikai Central Hospital | Haruhiko Hoshino | ||
| St. Marianna University Toyoko Hospital | Toshihiro Ueda | ||
| Keio University Hospital | Yoshiaki Itoh, Takato Abe, Shinichi Takahashi |
NHO National Hospital Organization
Fig. 2Trends in systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels during the 24-h administration of nicardipine: The SAMURAI-ICH study. Re-edited from Ref [19]. The boxes represent the interquartile ranges, the lines across the boxes indicate the median values, and the whiskers represent the 10th percentile and 90th percentile values
Main findings of substudies from SAMURAI-ICH
| Reference | Theme | Finding |
|---|---|---|
| # | Mean systolic blood pressure (SBP) during 24 h | High achieved SBP after standardized antihypertensive therapy in acute supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) was independently associated with poor clinical outcomes. |
| # | Three time periods of SBP during 24 h | Higher SBP levels during 0–8 h and during 8–16 h were independently associated with neurological deterioration, and higher SBP levels during 8–16 h and during 16–24 h were independently associated with poor outcomes. |
| # | SBP variability | SBP variabilities (standard deviation, successive variation) during the initial 24 h were independently associated with neurological deterioration and poor outcomes. |
| # | Relative SBP reduction | Insufficient relative SBP reduction was independently associated with poor clinical outcomes. |
| # | Timing of SBP lowering | Early achievement of target SBP < 160 mmHg was associated with a lower risk of hematoma expansion. |
| # | Total dose of nicardipine | Nicardipine dose needed for 24-h SBP lowering was roughly predictable by sex, age, body weight, and initial SBP. The maximum dose was associated with neurological deterioration. |
| # | Kidney function | Initial estimated glomerular filtration rate <60 mL/minute/m2 was associated with poor clinical outcomes. |
| # | Blood glucose | High blood glucose levels at 24 and 72 h were independently associated with poor clinical outcomes. |
| # | Conjugate eye deviation | The persistence of conjugate eye deviation was a significant predictor of death or dependency after acute supratentorial ICH even after adjusting for initial severity and hematoma volume. |
Fig. 3Correlations between the rates of clinical outcomes and mean systolic blood pressure levels (5-mmHg-interval categories, top panels) or their successive variation (quartiles, bottom panels) during the 24-h administration of nicardipine: The SAMURAI-ICH study. Re-edited from Ref [20, 22]
Fig. 4Trends of mean hourly systolic blood pressure in the ATACH-2 and INTERACT2 trials. Re-edited from Ref [9, 10]. Achieved systolic blood pressure levels in the standard treatment group of the ATACH-2 trial and the intensive treatment group of the INTERACT2 trial were similar (~140 mmHg) and that in the intensive treatment group of the ATACH-2 trial was lowered to ~120 mmHg
Associations of mean hourly systolic blood pressure between 1 and 24 h with outcomes
| Overall subjects | Japanese subjects | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Odds ratioa | 95% CIa | Odds ratioa | 95% CIa | |||
| Death or disability | ( | ( | ||||
| 1.12 | 1.00–1.26 | 0.0470 | 1.26 | 1.04–1.53 | 0.0198 | |
| Hematoma expansion | ( | ( | ||||
| 1.16 | 1.02–1.32 | 0.0207 | 1.47 | 1.17–1.85 | 0.0010 | |
Data on overall subjects are derived from Ref [36]. Data on Japanese subjects are newly analyzed for this review article.
Adjusted for sex, age, study group, race, baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, baseline hematoma volume, hematoma site, and onset-to-randomization time
aper 10 mmHg
Fig. 5Modified Rankin Scale scores at 90 days for Japanese patients with acute intracerebral hemorrhage divided into quartile groups by mean systolic blood pressure levels during the 24-h administration of nicardipine: The pooled analysis. Re-edited from Ref [36]. Arrows indicate the percentage with modified Rankin Scale scores of 4–6