SITS Article in The Lancet on thrombolysis with 3-4,5h after stroke onset

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Thrombolysis with alteplase 3-4·5 h after acute ischaemic stroke (SITS-ISTR): an observational study

Prof Nils Wahlgren MD email address   a   Corresponding Author Information
Niaz Ahmed MD a
Prof Antoni Dávalos MD b
ProfWerner Hacke MD c
Mónica Millán MD b
Keith Muir MD d
Risto O Roine MD f
Prof Danilo Toni MD g
Prof Kennedy R Lees FRCP e for the SITS investigators


Summary

Background

Intravenous alteplase is approved for use within 3 h of ischaemic stroke onset, although a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials suggests treatment benefit up to 4·5 h. We compared outcome in patients treated between 3 h and 4·5 h versus those treated within 3 h, who were recorded in the in the Safe Implementation of Treatments in Stroke (SITS), a prospective internet-based audit of the International Stroke Thrombolysis Registry (ISTR).

Methods

We compared 664 patients presenting with ischaemic stroke and given intravenous altepase (0·9 mg/kg total dose) between 3 h and 4·5 h with 11 865 patients treated within 3 h. All patients were otherwise compliant with European summary of product characteristics criteria and had been documented in the international stroke treatment registry between Dec 25, 2002, and Nov 15, 2007. Outcome measures were symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage within 24 h (haemorrhage type 2 associated with National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale [NIHSS] ≥4 points deterioration), and mortality and independence (modified Rankin scale of 0–2) at 3 months.

Findings

In the 3–4·5-h cohort, treatment was started at a median of 55 min later after symptom onset (195 min [IQR 187–210] vs 140 min [115–165], p<0·0001), median age was 3 years younger (65 years [55–73] vs 68 years [58–74], p<0·0001), and stroke severity was lower (NIHSS score 11 [7–16] vs 12 [8–17], p<0·0001) than in the 3-h cohort. We recorded no significant differences between the 3–4·5-h cohort and the within 3-h cohort for any outcome measure—rate of symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage: 2·2% (14 of 649) versus 1·6% (183 of 11 681) (odds ratio [OR] 1·18 [95% CI 0·89–1·55], p=0·24; adjusted OR 1·32 [1·00–1·75], p=0·052); mortality: 12·7% (70 of 551) versus 12·2% (1263 of 10 368) (OR 1·02 [0·90–1·17]; p=0·72; adjusted OR 1·15 [1·00–1·33]; p=0·053); and independence: 58·0% (314 of 541) versus 56·3% (5756 of 10231) (OR 1·04 [0·95–1·13], p=0·42; adjusted OR 0·93 [0·84–1·03], p=0·18).

Interpretation

Alteplase remains safe when given at 3–4·5 h after ischaemic stroke, offering an opportunity for patients who cannot be treated within the standard 3-h timeframe.

Funding

Boehringer-Ingelheim, European Union Public Health Executive Authority.

Affiliations

a. Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
b. Department of Neurosciences, Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol, Barcelona, Spain
c. Department of Neurology, University of Heidelberg, Germany
d. Division of Clinical Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
e. Department of Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
f. Department of Neurology, Turku University Central Hospital, Turku, Finland
g. Department of Neurology, Department of Neurological Sciences, University “La Sapienza”, Rome, Italy

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