Basilar Artery Occlusion Chinese Endovascular Trial in Patients With Large Core Infarct
NCT ID: NCT07046299
Last Updated: 2025-07-01
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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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
NA
314 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-07-01
2028-11-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Endovascular Therapy Plus Best Medical Treatment
Patients randomized to this arm will receive endovascular therapy (EVT) in addition to best medical treatment. EVT must be initiated within 24 hours of symptom onset and completed within 3 hours.The EVT strategy will be selected by the treating neurointerventionalist based on vascular findings. Allowed procedures include mechanical thrombectomy, intra-arterial thrombolysis, balloon angioplasty, stent implantation, or a combination of these.
Endovascular Therapy Plus Best Medical Treatment
Participants assigned to the endovascular therapy arm will receive EVT in addition to best medical treatment. EVT must be initiated within 24 hours of symptom onset and completed within 3 hours of groin puncture. After evaluating vascular anatomy, neurointerventionalists will determine the most appropriate strategy based on the presence of proximal stenosis, occlusion morphology, and vessel tortuosity. Permitted interventions include mechanical thrombectomy, stent thrombectomy, aspiration thrombectomy, intra-arterial thrombolysis, balloon angioplasty, and stent implantation. The choice of treatment approach is left to the discretion of the treating physician, and combinations of techniques are allowed.
Best Medical Treatment Alone
Patients in this arm will receive best medical treatment alone in accordance with current stroke guidelines. No endovascular therapy will be performed.
Best Medical Treatment Alone
Participants in this arm will receive best medical treatment and maximal supportive care according to current stroke guidelines, without the use of mechanical thrombectomy or any intra-arterial intervention.
Interventions
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Endovascular Therapy Plus Best Medical Treatment
Participants assigned to the endovascular therapy arm will receive EVT in addition to best medical treatment. EVT must be initiated within 24 hours of symptom onset and completed within 3 hours of groin puncture. After evaluating vascular anatomy, neurointerventionalists will determine the most appropriate strategy based on the presence of proximal stenosis, occlusion morphology, and vessel tortuosity. Permitted interventions include mechanical thrombectomy, stent thrombectomy, aspiration thrombectomy, intra-arterial thrombolysis, balloon angioplasty, and stent implantation. The choice of treatment approach is left to the discretion of the treating physician, and combinations of techniques are allowed.
Best Medical Treatment Alone
Participants in this arm will receive best medical treatment and maximal supportive care according to current stroke guidelines, without the use of mechanical thrombectomy or any intra-arterial intervention.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Occlusion (TIMI 0-1) of the basilar artery or intracranial segments of both vertebral arteries (V4) as evidenced by CTA/MRA/DSA.
3. Patients with large core infarction in the posterior circulation, defined as a posterior circulation Acute Stroke Prognosis Early CT score (pc-ASPECTS) score of 3-5 on CT angiography source images or MR with diffusion-weighted imaging or non-contrast CT.
4. Age ≥18 and ≤80 years.
5. Baseline NIHSS score ≥6 at the time of randomization.
6. No significant pre-stroke functional disability (modified Rankin Scale, mRS ≤ 1).
7. Informed consent obtained from patient or acceptable patient surrogate.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Baseline platelet count \< 50000/µL.
3. Baseline blood glucose of \< 50mg/dL or \>400mg/dL.
4. Severe, sustained hypertension (SBP \> 220 mm Hg or DBP \> 110 mm Hg) NOTE: If the blood pressure can be successfully reduced and maintained below these levels using commonly used medications in China for these purposes (including iv antihypertensive drips), the patient can be enrolled.
5. Patients in whom baseline NIHSS can not be obtained by a neurologist or emergency physician prior to sedation or intubation.
6. Seizures at stroke onset which would preclude obtaining a baseline NIHSS.
7. Serious, advanced, or terminal illness with anticipated life expectancy of less than one year.
8. History of life threatening allergy (more than rash) to contrast medium.
9. Patients with acute stroke within the first 48 hours after percutaneous cardiac, cerebrovascular interventions and major surgery .
10. Renal insufficiency with creatinine ≥ 3 mg/dL.
11. Woman of childbearing potential who is known to be pregnant or lactating or who has a positive pregnancy test on admission.
12. Subject participating in a study involving an investigational drug or device that would impact this study.
13. Known diagnosis or clinical suspicion of cerebral vasculitis.
14. Patients with a pre-existing neurological or psychiatric disease that would confound the neurological or functional evaluations.
15. Unlikely to be available for 90 days follow-up (e.g. no fixed home address, visitor from overseas).
16. Pons-midbrain-index of ≥ 4 on CT angiography source images or MR with diffusion-weighted imaging or non-contrast CT.
17. CT or MR evidence of hemorrhage (the presence of microbleeds on MRI is allowed).
18. Complete cerebellar infarct on CT or MRI with significant mass effect and compression of the fourth ventricle.
19. Complete bilateral thalamic infarction on CT or MRI.
20. Evidence of vertebral occlusion, high grade stenosis or arterial dissection in the extracranial or intracranial segment that cannot be treated or will prevent access to the intracranial clot or excessive tortuosity of cervical vessels precluding device delivery/deployment.
21. Subjects with occlusions in both anterior and posterior circulation.
22. Evidence of intracranial tumor (except small meningioma).
18 Years
80 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Capital Medical University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Ji Xunming,MD,PhD
Professor of Neurology, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University
Locations
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Xuanwu Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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BAOCHE3
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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