Penumbral Rescue by normobaric O = O administration in patients with ischemic stroke and target mismatch proFile (PROOF): Study protocol of a phase IIb trial.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_7560CB6925FF
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Penumbral Rescue by normobaric O = O administration in patients with ischemic stroke and target mismatch proFile (PROOF): Study protocol of a phase IIb trial.
Journal
International journal of stroke
Working group(s)
PROOF investigators
Contributor(s)
Hassen W.B., Benz T., Brandhorst A., Cendrero J., Cheng B., Cuisenier P., Favre-Wiki I., Garambois K., Jensen M., Guillen A.N., Merchan A.P., Pala E., Pancorbo O., Morenilla A.P., Garcia H.Q., Richter V., Schell M., Schirmer A., Sibolt G., Stoop W., Wischmann J., Zanolini U.
ISSN
1747-4949 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1747-4930
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
19
Number
1
Pages
120-126
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Clinical Trial Protocol ; Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Oxygen is essential for cellular energy metabolism. Neurons are particularly vulnerable to hypoxia. Increasing oxygen supply shortly after stroke onset could preserve the ischemic penumbra until revascularization occurs.
PROOF investigates the use of normobaric oxygen (NBO) therapy within 6 h of symptom onset/notice for brain-protective bridging until endovascular revascularization of acute intracranial anterior-circulation occlusion.
Randomized (1:1), standard treatment-controlled, open-label, blinded endpoint, multicenter adaptive phase IIb trial.
Primary outcome is ischemic core growth (mL) from baseline to 24 h (intention-to-treat analysis). Secondary efficacy outcomes include change in NIHSS from baseline to 24 h, mRS at 90 days, cognitive and emotional function, and quality of life. Safety outcomes include mortality, intracranial hemorrhage, and respiratory failure. Exploratory analyses of imaging and blood biomarkers will be conducted.
Using an adaptive design with interim analysis at 80 patients per arm, up to 456 participants (228 per arm) would be needed for 80% power (one-sided alpha 0.05) to detect a mean reduction of ischemic core growth by 6.68 mL, assuming 21.4 mL standard deviation.
By enrolling endovascular thrombectomy candidates in an early time window, the trial replicates insights from preclinical studies in which NBO showed beneficial effects, namely early initiation of near 100% inspired oxygen during short temporary ischemia. Primary outcome assessment at 24 h on follow-up imaging reduces variability due to withdrawal of care and early clinical confounders such as delayed extubation and aspiration pneumonia.
ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03500939; EudraCT: 2017-001355-31.
PROOF investigates the use of normobaric oxygen (NBO) therapy within 6 h of symptom onset/notice for brain-protective bridging until endovascular revascularization of acute intracranial anterior-circulation occlusion.
Randomized (1:1), standard treatment-controlled, open-label, blinded endpoint, multicenter adaptive phase IIb trial.
Primary outcome is ischemic core growth (mL) from baseline to 24 h (intention-to-treat analysis). Secondary efficacy outcomes include change in NIHSS from baseline to 24 h, mRS at 90 days, cognitive and emotional function, and quality of life. Safety outcomes include mortality, intracranial hemorrhage, and respiratory failure. Exploratory analyses of imaging and blood biomarkers will be conducted.
Using an adaptive design with interim analysis at 80 patients per arm, up to 456 participants (228 per arm) would be needed for 80% power (one-sided alpha 0.05) to detect a mean reduction of ischemic core growth by 6.68 mL, assuming 21.4 mL standard deviation.
By enrolling endovascular thrombectomy candidates in an early time window, the trial replicates insights from preclinical studies in which NBO showed beneficial effects, namely early initiation of near 100% inspired oxygen during short temporary ischemia. Primary outcome assessment at 24 h on follow-up imaging reduces variability due to withdrawal of care and early clinical confounders such as delayed extubation and aspiration pneumonia.
ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03500939; EudraCT: 2017-001355-31.
Keywords
Humans, Brain Ischemia/complications, Endovascular Procedures/methods, Ischemic Stroke/complications, Ischemic Stroke/diagnosis, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Oxygen/therapeutic use, Quality of Life, Thrombectomy/methods, Treatment Outcome, Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic, NBO, Normobaric oxygen therapy, hyperoxygenation, ischemic stroke, neuroprotection, penumbra, thrombectomy
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
03/08/2023 14:56
Last modification date
16/01/2024 7:13