WP3c – Improving Reperfusion strategies in Ischemic Stroke (IRIS)
Staff
WP leaders: Charles Majoie (AUMC) & Yvo Roos (AUMC)
Postdoc: Manon Kappelhof (AUMC), Kilian Treurniet (AUMC)
PhD: Fabiano Cavalcante (AUMC), Roman Rohner (Inselsptal Bern)
The workpackage
The RCT MR CLEAN-NO IV (CONTRAST 1.0 WP3c) studied the value of intravenous alteplase administration prior to EVT. It finished enrolment of 539 patients in 3 countries 1.5 years earlier than expected, with 0% loss-to-follow-up. The trial found comparable results with and without alteplase – but there was not enough statistical certainty to confirm non-inferiority.
Globally, five other randomized trials studied this topic: in China (DIRECT-MT, DEVT, Japan (SKIP), Switzerland (SWIFT DIRECT), Australia (DIRECT-SAFE). Only the Chinese trials found significant non-inferiority, though opinions on the used noninferiority boundaries differed. In all trials, confidence intervals were wide. The effect of alteplase differed between patient subgroups – but the trials individually had insufficient power for reliable subgroup analyses.
We propose a collaboration between all trials under the name of IRIS: Improving Reperfusion strategies in acute Ischemic Stroke. In an individual patient data meta-analysis, we can calculate the most reliable treatment effects, explore non-inferiority definitions, and perform accurate subgroup analyses. Together, we can provide the highest-level evidence for worldwide reliable guideline recommendations, and pave the way to more individualized, patient-tailored stroke care.
Objectives
The key objectives of the IRIS pooling are:
- To provide a pooled analysis of individual patient data from 5 randomized controlled trials, to investigate whether direct EVT is non-inferior to IVT followed by EVT in patients with an ischemic stroke due to a large vessel occlusion, by prespecified non-inferiority margins.
- To explore whether direct EVT is non-inferior to IVT followed by EVT in prespecified subgroups.
- To further investigate workflow implications of the results from aims 1) and 2).
- To further investigate implications of imaging results from aims 1) and 2) (i.e., improving recanalization and reperfusion, thrombus imaging characteristics, etc.).
- To improve patient selection and to contribute towards more tailored decision-making concerning IVT use in patients requiring EVT for acute ischemic stroke.