PeRforation EVents During ENdovascular Therapy for Acute Ischemic Stroke
NCT ID: NCT06394180
Last Updated: 2024-12-20
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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RECRUITING
1000 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2024-12-02
2027-09-30
Brief Summary
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1. Find what factors make this perforation more likely.
2. Understand why the perforation happens by looking closely at images taken during the procedure.
3. Create a simple way to classify these perforations to help doctors decide how to treat them right away.
4. Improve the emergent treatment of vessel perforation to stop the bleeding rapidly.
5. Provide data to guide decision whether thrombectomy should be continued or aborted after the event of vessel perforation.
6. Develop a safer way to perform thrombectomy.
Investigators will compare the results collected for patients where perforation happened with those where perforation did not happen.
Detailed Description
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Despite the effectiveness of thrombectomy, the procedure has a relevant risk of periprocedural complications. In 1-2% of patients who undergo thrombectomy, a periprocedural intracranial vessel perforation occurs with subsequent arterial intracranial bleeding. This complication typically represents a major turning point and is associated with severe permanent sequelae and a mortality of approximately 50%. Given the rapidly increasing frequency of thrombectomies, an increase in the incidence of periprocedural perforations is to be expected. The available data on vascular perforations during thrombectomy are limited. It is unknown why a minority of patients experience this complication while the majority are spared. Likewise, the exact pathophysiological process that leads to vessel wall damage is not understood. There is also uncertainty as to whether extravasation in the event of vessel perforation should be treated endovascularly with intention to stop the bleeding, e.g. via temporary vessel occlusion using a balloon catheter or permanent vascular occlusion using coils or liquid embolization. In addition, there is hardly any data on whether thrombectomy attempts should continue after a perforation has occurred or whether the procedure should be aborted. Due to the low frequency of this complication, randomized prospective trials will most likely not be feasible.
In an international retrospective cohort study with 25 participating centers, the investigators were able to evaluate data from over 25,000 thrombectomies. In this cohort, 335 vessel perforations were reported. About half of the affected patients died within the first 3 months after perforation. The remaining patients experienced a clinical course that was, on average, worse than that of stroke patients without perforation in large registries. This research represents the largest cohort of patients with perforation during thrombectomy to date. It shows that although perforations are rare complications, they have enormous relevance for the affected patients.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
OTHER
Study Groups
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Perforation during thrombectomy
The target cohort includes 500 patients where vessel perforation occured during Thrombectomy.
No interventions assigned to this group
No perforation during thrombectomy
The comparison cohort includes 500 patients, matched to the target cohort, where vessel perforation did not occur during Thrombectomy.
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Acute ischemic stroke with occlusion of one or several intracranial arteries and subsequent thrombectomy.
* Target cohort: Occurrence of intracranial perforation during thrombectomy with evidence of contrast extravasation in at least one diagnostic angiography series.
* Comparison cohort: No perforation during thrombectomy. Every patient in the comparison group is matched to one patient in the target population. Matching will be carried out with respect to age, gender, participating center and location of the vascular occlusion.
Exclusion Criteria
* Presence of both ischemic stroke and intracranial hemorrhage on pre-interventional imaging.
* Patients with intracranial dissection without active contrast extravasation.
* Patients with rupture of a pre-existing intracranial aneurysm during thrombectomy.
* Patients with contrast medium extravasation into a venous space instead of free contrast medium extravasation, e.g. the cavernous sinus with consecutive development of a carotid-cavernous fistula.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Victor Schulze-Zachau, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
Locations
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University Hospital Basel
Basel, , Switzerland
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Victor Schulze-Zachau, MD
Role: primary
Marios N Psychogios, Prof. Dr.
Role: backup
Other Identifiers
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0000-00000; th24Psychogios5
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id