ESCAPE: Endovascular Treatment for Small Core and Proximal Occlusion Ischemic Stroke

Sponsor
University of Calgary (Other)
Overall Status
Terminated
CT.gov ID
NCT01778335
Collaborator
Medtronic - MITG (Industry), Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada (Other), Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary (Other)
316
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2
24
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Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

The purpose of the study is to understand whether a new treatment of stroke - endovascular clot removal - can be added to the current standard of care to improve patient outcomes.

All patients will receive the best standard stroke treatment. This includes treating patients with the clot dissolving drug tPA (tissue plasminogen activator). However, t-PA does not work in some patients and others are not eligible to receive t-PA because they present too late for treatment (they woke up with their stroke symptoms or their stroke was not witnessed).

During endovascular revascularization the blockage in the artery is removed with the use of devices called stentreivers and or by giving clot dissolving drug at the site of the blockage in the artery to restore blood flow. Stentrievers are devices that have been designed by different companies to remove blood clots from arteries.

Up to a maximum of 500 people at 20-25 hospitals across Canada and other countries will participate in this study.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Procedure: Endovascular thrombectomy/thrombolysis
Phase 3

Detailed Description

ESCAPE is a phase 3, randomized, open-label with blinded outcome evaluation, controlled, parallel group design.

The primary objectives of this study are to show that rapid endovascular revascularization amongst radiologically selected (small core/proximal occlusion) patients with ischemic stroke results in improved outcome compared to patients treated in clinical routine.

Eligible patients will be enrolled within 12 hours of last seen normal with a baseline NIHSS

5 at the time of randomization. There must be a confirmed symptomatic intracranial occlusion, based on single phase, multiphase or dynamic CTA, at one or more of the following locations: Carotid T/L, M1 MCA, or M1-MCA equivalent (2 or more M2-MCAs). Anterior temporal artery is not considered an M2.

All patients will receive the best standard of medical care according to modern acute stroke care guidelines. Control arm subjects will receive best medical care. In the intervention/experimental arm, subjects will be treated with endovascular thrombectomy or thrombolysis using currently available technology for use in the ESCAPE site for thrombectomy/thrombolysis.

This study consists of one 90-day study period for each subject. Subjects will be hospitalized for care after their acute stroke according to the current standard of care. Subjects are required to return to clinic on Days 30 & 90 for end-of-study procedures.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Actual Enrollment :
316 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Masking:
Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
Endovascular Treatment for Small Core and Anterior Circulation Proximal Occlusion With Emphasis on Minimizing CT to Recanalization Times (ESCAPE) Trial
Study Start Date :
Jan 1, 2013
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Nov 1, 2014
Actual Study Completion Date :
Jan 1, 2015

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
No Intervention: Control

Control arm subjects will receive best medical care.

Experimental: Endovascular thrombectomy/thrombolysis

Endovascular mechanical thrombectomy or endovascular delivery of thrombolytic agent

Procedure: Endovascular thrombectomy/thrombolysis
Endovascular mechanical thrombectomy or thrombolysis
Other Names:
  • Endovascular mechanical thrombectomy
  • Outcome Measures

    Primary Outcome Measures

    1. Shift in the mRS score, defined by a proportional odds model. [90 days]

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    1. The proportion of patients who achieve a NIHSS score 0-2 [90 days]

      Stroke severity. Clinical scale outcome score from 0 to 42.

    2. The proportion of patients who achieve a mRS 0-2 [90 days]

      Functional outcome. Dichotomous outcome, reported as independent (mRS 0-2) vs dependence or death (mRS 3-6). In addition, shift analysis (proportional odds model) representing the odds of improvement on within the scale with treatment.

    3. The proportion of patients who achieve a Barthel Index > 90 [90 days]

      Activities of daily living. Clinical scale outcome score from 0 to 100.

    4. EQ5D [90 days]

      Quality of life. Clinical scale score as well as a visual analog scale of QOL from 0 to 100.

    5. Cognitive outcome - Trailmaking A, B [90 days]

      Trailmaking A, B; Executive function task. Timed outcome as a continuous measure in seconds.

    6. Cognitive outcome - MOCA [90 days]

      Global test of cognitive function. Scale from 0 to 30 points.

    7. Cognitive outcome - Boston Naming Test [90 days]

      Test of language function

    8. Cognitive Outcome - Sunnybrook hemi-spatial neglect battery [90 days]

      Test of hemi-spatial neglect.

    Other Outcome Measures

    1. The proportion of patients who suffer a Safety Outcome [0-90 days]

      The proportion of patients with the composite of: (i) symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (ii) major bleeding due to femoral artery access complications including groin hematoma, retroperitoneal hematoma (iii) contrast nephropathy.

    2. Economic (cost-effectiveness) analysis [90 days]

      Economic analysis

    3. Evaluation of waiver/deferral of consent process [90 days]

      Qualitative evaluation of the waiver/deferral of consent process

    4. Safety - Other [90 days]

      (i) The total radiation dose (CT, CTA, angiography) reported as a continuous measure. (ii) The proportion of patients with malignant MCA infarction (iii) The proportion of patients undergoing hemicraniectomy.

    Eligibility Criteria

    Criteria

    Ages Eligible for Study:
    18 Years and Older
    Sexes Eligible for Study:
    All
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
    No

    Inclusion Criteria A. Clinical (Heterogeneous sampling frame)

    1. Acute ischemic stroke

    2. Age 18 or greater

    3. Onset (last-seen-well) time to randomization time < 12 hours.

    4. Disabling stroke defined as a baseline NIHSS > 5 at the time of randomization.

    5. Pre-stroke (24 hours prior to stroke onset) independent functional status in activities of daily living with modified Barthel Index > 90. Patient must be living in their own home, apartment or seniors lodge where no nursing care is required.

    1. Imaging (Homogeneous target population)
    1. Confirmed symptomatic intracranial occlusion, based on single phase, multiphase or dynamic CTA, at one or more of the following locations: Carotid T/L, M1 MCA, or M1-MCA equivalent (2 or more M2-MCAs). Anterior temporal artery is not considered an M2.

    2. Non-contrast CT and CTA for trial eligibility performed or repeated at ESCAPE stroke center with endovascular suite on-site.

    3. Endovascular treatment intended to be initiated (groin puncture) within 60 minutes of baseline non-contrast CT with target baseline non-contrast CT to first recanalization of 90 minutes.

    4. Signed informed consent or appropriate signed deferral of consent where approved.

    Exclusion Criteria

    1. Baseline non-contrast CT reveals a moderate/large core defined as extensive early ischemic changes of ASPECTS 0-5 in the territory of symptomatic intracranial occlusion.

    2. Other confirmation of a moderate to large core defined one of three ways:

    3. On a single phase, multiphase or dynamic CTA: no or minimal collaterals in a region greater than 50% of the MCA territory when compared to pial filling on the contralateral side (multiphase/dynamic CTA preferred) OR

    4. On CT perfusion (>8 cm coverage): a low CBV and very low CBF ASPECTS <6 AND in the symptomatic MCA territory OR

    5. On CT perfusion(<8 cm coverage): a region of low CBV and very low CBF >1/3 of the CTP imaged symptomatic MCA territory.

    6. Groin puncture is not possible within 60 minutes of the first slice of non-contrast CT acquisition (please note that if CTP is performed it should be done after CTA).

    7. No femoral pulses or very difficult endovascular access that will result in a non-contrast CT-to-recanalization time that is longer than 90 minutes, or will result in an inability to deliver endovascular therapy.

    8. Pregnancy; if a woman is of child-bearing potential a urine or serum beta HCG test is positive.

    9. Severe contrast allergy or absolute contraindication to iodinated contrast.

    10. Suspected intracranial dissection as a cause of stroke.

    11. Clinical history, past imaging or clinical judgment suggests that the intracranial occlusion is chronic.

    12. Patient has a severe or fatal comorbid illness that will prevent improvement or follow-up or that will render the procedure unlikely to benefit the patient.

    Contacts and Locations

    Locations

    Site City State Country Postal Code
    1 University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada T2N2T9

    Sponsors and Collaborators

    • University of Calgary
    • Medtronic - MITG
    • Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada
    • Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary

    Investigators

    • Principal Investigator: MIchael D Hill, MD MSc FRCPC, University of Calgary
    • Study Director: Andrew M Demchuk, MD FRCPC, University of Calgary
    • Study Director: Mayank Goyal, MD FRCPC, University of Calgary

    Study Documents (Full-Text)

    None provided.

    More Information

    Additional Information:

    Publications

    None provided.
    Responsible Party:
    Dr. Michael Hill, Professor, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary
    ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
    NCT01778335
    Other Study ID Numbers:
    • Version 3.8
    First Posted:
    Jan 29, 2013
    Last Update Posted:
    Mar 23, 2015
    Last Verified:
    Mar 1, 2015
    Keywords provided by Dr. Michael Hill, Professor, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary
    Additional relevant MeSH terms:

    Study Results

    No Results Posted as of Mar 23, 2015