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Tranexamic acid in patients with intracerebral haemorrhage (STOP-AUST): a multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled, phase 2 trial

Authors :
Jiann-Shing Jeng
Richard I. Aviv
Gerli Sibolt
Teddy Y. Wu
Stephen M. Davis
Bernard Yan
Marjaana Tiainen
Sami Curtze
Sung-Chun Tang
Darshan Shah
Leonid Churilov
Christopher Levi
Henry Ma
Chung Y. Hsu
Geoffrey A Donnan
Bruce C.V. Campbell
Peter Mitchell
Nawaf Yassi
Vincent Thijs
Gagan Sharma
Christen D. Barras
Mark W Parsons
Timothy Kleinig
Daniel Strbian
Thanh G. Phan
Atte Meretoja
Andrew Moey
Cho Der-Yang
Jackson Harvey
Tissa Wijeratne
Neil J. Spratt
Christopher F. Bladin
Geoffrey Cloud
Source :
The Lancet Neurology. 19:980-987
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Despite intracerebral haemorrhage causing 5% of deaths worldwide, few evidence-based therapeutic strategies other than stroke unit care exist. Tranexamic acid decreases haemorrhage in conditions such as acute trauma and menorrhoea. We aimed to assess whether tranexamic acid reduces intracerebral haemorrhage growth in patients with acute intracerebral haemorrhage.We did a prospective, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, investigator-led, phase 2 trial at 13 stroke centres in Australia, Finland, and Taiwan. Patients were eligible if they were aged 18 years or older, had an acute intracerebral haemorrhage fulfilling clinical criteria (eg, Glasgow Coma Scale score of7, intracerebral haemorrhage volume70 mL, no identified or suspected secondary cause of intracerebral haemorrhage, no thrombotic events within the previous 12 months, no planned surgery in the next 24 h, and no use of anticoagulation), had contrast extravasation on CT angiography (the so-called spot sign), and were treatable within 4·5 h of symptom onset and within 1 h of CT angiography. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either 1 g of intravenous tranexamic acid over 10 min followed by 1 g over 8 h or matching placebo, started within 4·5 h of symptom onset. Randomisation was done using a centralised web-based procedure with randomly permuted blocks of varying size. All patients, investigators, and staff involved in patient management were masked to treatment. The primary outcome was intracerebral haemorrhage growth (33% relative or6 mL absolute) at 24 h. The primary and safety analyses were done in the intention-to-treat population. The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01702636).Between March 1, 2013, and Aug 13, 2019, we enrolled and randomly assigned 100 participants to the tranexamic acid group (n=50) or the placebo group (n=50). Median age was 71 years (IQR 57-79) and median intracerebral haemorrhage volume was 14·6 mL (7·9-32·7) at baseline. The primary outcome was not different between the two groups: 26 (52%) patients in the placebo group and 22 (44%) in the tranexamic acid group had intracerebral haemorrhage growth (odds ratio [OR] 0·72 [95% CI 0·32-1·59], p=0·41). There was no evidence of a difference in the proportions of patients who died or had thromboembolic complications between the groups: eight (16%) in the placebo group vs 13 (26%) in the tranexamic acid group died and two (4%) vs one (2%) had thromboembolic complications. None of the deaths was considered related to study medication.Our study does not provide evidence that tranexamic acid prevents intracerebral haemorrhage growth, although the treatment was safe with no increase in thromboembolic complications. Larger trials of tranexamic acid, with simpler recruitment methods and an earlier treatment window, are justified.National Health and Medical Research Council, Royal Melbourne Hospital Foundation.

Details

ISSN :
14744422
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....38313209ed25744e989c1b287b798e45
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s1474-4422(20)30369-0