The Extended CTA for the Successful Screening of Cardioaortic Thrombus in Acute Ischemic Stroke and TIA (DAYLIGHT) Trial
NCT ID: NCT05522244
Last Updated: 2025-04-01
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
830 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-07-17
2024-11-27
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The most frequently used diagnostic method in clinical practice to detect cardioaortic thrombi is transthoracic echocardiography (TTE). However, the sensitivity of TTE for detecting LV thrombi is as low as 35% without contrast and 64% with proper ultrasound contrast. Furthermore, the sensitivity for LAA thrombi is zero, given that the LAA cannot be visualized on a TTE. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is a better alternative in terms of sensitivity for LV thrombus detection. However, the relatively low availability, higher cost, and invasive nature of TEE limit its large-scale usability.
In most stroke centers, patients presenting with an acute ischemic stroke or TIA undergo a computer tomography (CT) angiography (CTA) of the neck and intracranial vessels. This standard of care CTA (sCTA) classically includes the aortic arch and the higher portion of the ascending/descending aorta, but does not involve the LAA, LV, or cardiac valves. A recent study performed among 300 patients with an acute ischemic stroke showed an overall LAA thrombus detection of 6.6% and 15% in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) by extending the CTA 6 cm below the carina. This is an extraordinarily high prevalence of LAA compared to 0.5% to 4.8% of intracardiac thrombi identified on TEE in most previous studies. The major limitation of previous CTA and TEE studies is their observational design, so the differing prevalence of LAA thrombi could be explained by dissimilar population characteristics or selection bias. Based on the methodological limitation of prior studies and the promising role of extended CTAs (eCTA), a randomized controlled trial comparing eCTA + standard of care stroke workup vs. sCTA + standard of care stroke workup is needed.
Demonstrating that performing an eCTA can significantly increase the detection of LAA thrombi compared to sCTA has three important implications with the potential to improve clinical practice, patients' outcomes, and clinical guidelines. Furthermore, an eCTA could become part of the standard of care workup of patients presenting to the Emergency Department with a hyperacute ischemic stroke. Proving that eCTA increases the detection of cardio-aortic thrombi in stroke patients in a randomized controlled trial (highest level of evidence) may result in the recommendation of this approach in future guidelines. The increased detection of LAA thrombi may increase the use of oral anticoagulants, which have proven efficacy for the prevention of recurrent strokes in patients with cardiac thrombi, ultimately resulting in fewer stroke recurrences.10 However, proving the latter concept would require a larger randomized clinical trial with stroke recurrence as the primary efficacy endpoint. The LAA is the most frequent source of thromboembolism in patients with AF11 and LAA thrombi are associated with increased detection of AF on cardiac rhythm monitoring, implying that finding an LAA thrombus may help improve the selection of patients who could benefit from prolonged cardiac monitoring after stroke.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
NONE
Study Groups
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standard CTA
Standard CTA performed as standard of care for Stroke Workup
No interventions assigned to this group
extended CTA
The standard CTA will be extended 6 cm below the carina
extended CTA
Extending the standard CTA 6 cm below the carina.
Interventions
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extended CTA
Extending the standard CTA 6 cm below the carina.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* A confirmed diagnosis of stroke or TIA is not mandatory for patient enrollment and randomization. However, patients without a cerebrovascular event will be further excluded from the analysis of efficacy and safety outcomes. Only patients with an adjudicated ischemic stroke or TIA will be included in the latter analyses. The same patient may be included more than once in the study in case of presenting to the hospital with a suspected stroke on different dates. These patients will be excluded only if they had an outcome event (cardioaortic thrombus) previously adjudicated in the study. The reason for including patients more than once is that the cause of the stroke or the stroke mechanism can change with time (e.g. patient with post-stroke MI developing a new LV thrombus, a patient who had a stroke due to AF who is now on anticoagulants and presents with a new contralateral stroke due to severe carotid artery stenosis).
Exclusion Criteria
* Pregnancy
* Lack of a peripheral vein access for intravenous contrast administration
* Any contraindication for the clinical use of a CTA for hyperacute stroke care (e.g., end-stage renal disease that contraindicates a CTA), and active or past cancer of the head, neck, or chest)
* Patients with known or newly diagnosed AF will not be excluded.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute OR Lawson Research Institute of St. Joseph's
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Luciano Sposato, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
London Health Sciences Center, Western University
Rodrigo Bagur, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
London Health Sciences Center, Western University
Locations
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London Health Sciences Centre
London, Ontario, Canada
Countries
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References
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Sposato LA, Ayan D, Ahmed M, Fridman S, Mandzia JL, Elrayes M, Lodol F, Khaw AV, Mai LM, Bogiatzi C, Casserly C, Fraser JA, Chan R, Florendo Cumbermack A, Markovic N, Yu Y, Debicki D, Fleming L, Beauchamp B, Lambourn L, Mayich M, Milroy L, Sharma M, Pandey S, Bagur R. Extended CT angiography versus standard CT angiography for the detection of cardioaortic thrombus in patients with ischaemic stroke and transient ischaemic attack (DAYLIGHT): a prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded end-point trial. Lancet Neurol. 2025 Jun;24(6):489-499. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(25)00111-5.
Other Identifiers
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121385
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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