Overview

Combined Treatment With Alteplase (Rt-PA) and Cerebrolysin® in Acute Ischemic Hemispheric Stroke

Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2008-07-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
It should be shown that Cerebrolysin in combination with Alteplase, the medication that should recover the blood flow through the brain, is an effective and save medication to treat ischeamic stroke.
Phase:
Phase 3
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Ever Neuro Pharma GmbH
Collaborator:
JSW-Research Forschungslabor GmbH, Parkring 12, 8074 Grambach
Treatments:
Cerebrolysin
Fibrinolytic Agents
Pharmaceutical Solutions
Tissue Plasminogen Activator
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Female or male inpatients.

- Age: 18-80 years.

- If female, patient must not be pregnant

- Clinical diagnosis of ischemic stroke causing a measurable neurological deficit
defined as impairment of language, motor function, cognition and/or gaze,vision or
neglect. Ischemic stroke is defined as an event characterized by the sudden onset of
an acute focal neurologic deficit presumed to be due to cerebral ischemia after CT
scan excludes haemorrhage.

- Onset of symptoms within 3 hours prior to initiation of rt-PA administration.

- Stroke symptoms are to be present for at least 30 minutes and have not significantly
improved before treatment. Symptoms must be distinguishable from an episode of
generalized ischemia (i.e. syncope), seizure or migraine disorder.

- Patient is willing to participate voluntarily and to sign a written patient informed
consent. Informed consent will be obtained from each patient or the subject's legally
authorized representative or relatives, or deferred where applicable, according to the
regulatory and legal requirements of the participating country.

- Patients who are unable to sign but who are able to understand the meaning of
participation in the study may give an oral witnessed informed consent. These patients
have to make clear undoubtful that they are willing to participate voluntarily and
must be able to understand an explanation of the contents of the information sheet. A
written consent has to be obtained as soon as possible.

- Willingness and ability to comply with the protocol.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Evidence of intracranial haemorrhage (ICH) on the CT-scan

- Violation of inclusion criteria not approved by clinical study director or study
safety officer

- Failure to perform or to evaluate screening or baseline examinations

- Hospitalisation (except for study purposes) or change of concomitant medication 4
weeks prior to screening or during screening period

- Participation in another therapeutic clinical trial 3 months before baseline

- Patients with any history of prior stroke and concomitant diabetes

- Prior stroke within the last 3 months

- Platelet count of below 100x103/mm3

- Blood glucose <50 or >400 mg/dl (<2.77 or >22.15 mmol/L)

- Known haemorrhagic diathesis

- Manifest or recent severe or dangerous bleeding

- Known bacterial endocarditis, pericarditis

- Acute pancreatitis

- Documented ulcerative gastrointestinal disease during the last 3 months, oesophageal
varices, arterial-aneurysm, arterial/venous malformation

- Neoplasm with increased bleeding risk

- Severe liver disease, including hepatic failure, cirrhosis, portal hypertension,
oesaphageal varices) and active hepatitis

- Major surgery or significant trauma in past 3 months

- Lab values seriously abnormal, and/or more than 2 lab values abnormal not approved by
clinical study director or study safety officer

- Serious drug allergies

- Hypersensitivity to one of the components of the drug

- Severe renal impairment

- Systolic blood pressure >185 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure >110 mmHg, or aggressive
management (IV medication) necessary to reduce BP to these limits

- Recent (less than 10 days) traumatic external heart massage, obstetrical delivery,
recent puncture of a non-compressible blood-vessel (e.g. subclavian or jugular vein
puncture)

- Chronic intoxication or chronic substance use disorder with pharmaceuticals, drugs,
alcohol or industrial poisons

- Symptoms of ischemic attack began more than 3 hours prior to start of thrombolytic
therapy or if time of symptom onset is unknown

- Minor neurological deficit or symptoms rapidly improving before start of infusion

- Severe stroke as assessed clinically (e.g. NIHSS >25) and/or by appropriate imaging
techniques

- Epilepsy or epileptic seizure at onset of stroke

- Symptoms suggestive of subarachnoid haemorrhage, even if the CT-scan is normal

- Known history of or suspected intracranial haemorrhage

- Suspected subarachnoid haemorrhage or condition after subarachnoid hemorrhage from
aneurysm

- Any history of central nervous system damage (i.e. neoplasm, aneurysm, intracranial or
spinal surgery)

- Haemorrhagic retinopathy, e.g. in diabetes (vision disturbances may indicate
haemorrhagic retinopathy)

- Administration of heparin within the previous 48 hours and a thromboplastin time
exceeding the upper limit of normal for laboratory

- Patients receiving oral anticoagulants, e.g. warfarin sodium

- Special attention should be given to possible additive effects when used in
conjunction with anti-depressants or MAO-inhibitors

- Cerebrolysin should not be mixed with balanced amino acid solutions in an infusion