Overview

China Angioplasty & Stenting for Symptomatic Intracranial Severe Stenosis

Status:
Active, not recruiting
Trial end date:
2020-05-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
Patients with symptomatic stenosis of intradural arteries are at high risk for subsequent stroke. Since the SAMMPRIS trial, stenting is no longer recommended as primary treatment, however, the results of this trial, its inclusion criteria and its center selection received significant criticism and did not appear to reflect our experience, neither regarding natural history, nor treatment complications rate. As ICAS is the most common cause for stroke in Asian countries, we are hereby proposing a refined prospective randomized multicenter study in an Asian population with strictly defined patient and participating center inclusion criteria. The China Angioplasty & Stenting for Symptomatic Intracranial Severe Stenosis (CASSISS) trial, is an ongoing, government-funded, prospective, multicenter randomized trial. It recruits patients with recent TIA or stroke caused by 70-99% stenosis of a major intracranial artery. Patients with previous stroke related to perforator ischemia will not be included. Only high-volume center with a proven track record will enroll patients as determined by a lead-in phase. Patients will be randomized (1:1) to best medical therapy alone or medical therapy plus stenting. Primary endpoints are any stroke or death within 30 days after enrollment or after any revascularization procedure of the qualifying lesion during follow-up, or stroke in the territory of the symptomatic intracranial artery beyond 30 days The CASSISS trial will be conducted in 8 sites in China with core imaging lab review at a North American site and aims to have a sample size of 380 subjects (stenting, 190; medical therapy, 190). Recruitment is expected to be finished by Dec, 2016. Patients will be followed for at least three years. The trial is scheduled to complete in 2019. In the proposed trial, certain shortcomings of SAMMPRIS including patient and participating center selection will be addressed. The present manuscript outlines the rationale and design of the study. We estimate that this trial will allow for a critical reappraisal of the role of intracranial stenting for selected patients in high volume centers.
Phase:
Phase 3
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Xuanwu Hospital, Beijing
Criteria
Inclusion criteria:

1. eligible patients aged between 30-80 years; intracranial arterial stenosis related to
the following non-atherosclerotic factors will be not be considered: arterial
dissection, moya-moya disease; vasculitic disease; herpes zoster, varicella zoster or
other viral vasculopathy; neurosyphilis; any other intracranial infection; any
intracranial stenosis associated with cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis;
radiation-induced vasculopathy; fibromuscular dysplasia; sickle cell disease;
neurofibromatosis; benign angiopathy of central nervous system; postpartum angiopathy;
suspected vasospastic process, and suspected recanalized embolus;

2. Symptomatic ICAS: presented with TIA or stroke within the past 12 months attributed to
70%-99% stenosis of a major intracranial artery (internal carotid artery, MCA [M1],
vertebral artery, or basilar artery);

3. Degree of stenosis: 70%-99%; stenosis degree must be confirmed by catheter angiography
for enrollment in the trial;

4. There might be remote infarctions on MRI scan, which could be accounted by the
occlusion of the terminal cortical branches or hemodynamic compromise (perforator
occlusion excluded). Infarction due to perforators occlusion is defined as basal
ganglia or brainstem/thalamus infarction related with MCA or BA stenosis;

5. Expected ability to deliver the stent to the lesion;

6. All the patients should be performed with stenting beyond a duration of 3 weeks from
the latest ischemic symptom onset;

7. No recent infarctions identified on MRI (indicated as high signals on DWI series) upon
enrollment;

8. No massive cerebral infarction (>1/2 MCA territory), intracranial hemorrhage, epidural
or sub-dural hemorrhage, and intracranial brain tumor on CT or MRI scan;

9. mRS scale score of <=2;

10. Target vessel reference diameter must be measured to be 2.00 mm to 4.50 mm; target
area of stenosis is <=14 mm in length;

11. No childbearing potential or has a negative pregnancy test within the past 1 week
prior to study procedure; female patients had normal menses in the last 18 months;

12. Patient is willing and able to return for all follow-up visits required by the
protocol;

13. Patients understand the purpose and requirements of the study and have signed informed
consent form.

Exclusion criteria:

1. Refractory to general anesthesia; patients were not able to be overcome by
pre-treatment with medical therapy.

2. Any condition that precludes proper angiographic assessment.

3. Tandem extracranial or intracranial stenosis (70%-99%) or occlusion that is proximal
or distal to the target intracranial lesion.

4. Bilateral intracranial VA stenosis of 70%-99% and uncertainty about which lesion is
symptomatic (e.g., if patient has pon, midbrain, temporal and occipital symptoms).

5. Presence of a previously placed intravascular stent or graft in the ipsilateral
distribution within 30 days.

6. Previous treatment of target lesion with a stent, angioplasty, or other mechanical
device, or plan to perform staged angioplasty followed by stenting of target lesion.

7. Severe vascular tortuosity or anatomy that would preclude the safe introduction of a
guiding catheter, guiding sheath or stent placement.

8. Plan to perform concomitant angioplasty or stenting of an extracranial. vessel tandem
to an ipsilateral intracranial stenosis.

9. Presence of intraluminal thrombus proximal to or at the target lesion.

10. Any aneurysm proximal to or distal to intracranial stenotic artery.

11. Intracranial tumors or any intracranial vascular malformations.

12. Computed tomographic or angiographic evidence of severe calcification at target
lesion.

13. Thrombolytic therapy within 24 hours before enrollment.

14. Evolving stroke or progressive neurologic signs within 24 hours before enrollment.

15. Stroke of sufficient size (>5cm on CT or MRI) to place patient at risk of hemorrhagic
transformation during the procedure; hemorrhagic transformation of an ischemic stroke
within the past 15 days.

16. Previous spontaneous intracerebral (parenchymal) or other intracranial (subarachnoid,
subdural, or epidural) hemorrhage within 30 days.

17. Untreated chronic subdural hematoma >5 mm in thickness.

18. Other cardiac sources of emboli such as left ventricular aneurysms, intracardiac
filling defect, cardiomyopathy, aortic or mitral prosthetic heart valve, calcified
aortic stenosis, endocarditis, mitral stenosis, atrial septal defect, atrial septal
aneurysm, left atrial myxoma.

19. Myocardial infarction within previous 30 days.

20. Chronic atrial fibrillation; any episode of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation within the
past 6 months, or history of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation requiring chronic
anticoagulation.

21. Intolerance or allergic reaction to any of the medical therapy, including aspirin,
clopidogrel, heparin, and local or general anesthetics.

22. History of life-threatening allergy to contrast medium. If not life-threatening and
can be effectively pre-treated, patient can be enrolled at physicians' discretion.

23. Recent gastro-intestinal bleed that would interfere with anti-platelet therapy.

24. Active bleeding diathesis or coagulopathy; active peptic ulcer disease, major systemic
hemorrhage within 30 days, active bleeding diathesis, platelets count <125,000,
hematocrit <30, Hgb <10 g/dl, uncorrected INR >1.5, bleeding time >1 minute beyond
upper limit normal, or heparin-associated thrombocytopenia that increases the risk of
bleeding, uncontrolled severe hypertension (systolic BP>180 mm hg or diastolic BP>115
mm hg), severe liver impairment (AST or ALT >3 times normal, cirrhosis), creatinine
>265.2μmol/l (unless on dialysis)

25. Major surgery (including open femoral, aortic, or carotid surgery) within previous 30
days or planned in the next 90 days after enrollment.

26. Indication for warfarin or heparin beyond enrollment (note: exceptions allowed for use
of systemic heparin during stenting procedure or subcutaneous heparin for deep venous
thrombosis prophylaxis while hospitalized).

27. Inability to understand and cooperate with study procedures or sign informed consent

28. Severe dementia or psychiatric problems that prevent the patients from following an
outpatient program reliably.

29. Pregnancy or of childbearing potential and unwilling to use contraception for the
duration of this study

30. Actively participating in another drug or device trial that has not completed the
required protocol follow-up period.