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Title: | Tenecteplase versus alteplase for thrombolysis in patients selected by use of perfusion imaging within 4·5 h of onset of ischaemic stroke (TASTE): a multicentre, randomised, controlled, phase 3 non-inferiority trial |
Author: | Parsons, M. W. Yogendrakumar, V. Churilov, L. Garcia-Esperon, C. Campbell, B. C. V. Russell, M. L. Sharma, G. Chen, C. Lin, L. Chew, B. L. Ng, F. C. dos Santos, A. Williamson, J. Pavlin-Premrl, D. Beharry, J. G�mez, A. S. Ma, M. Deepak, A. Park, A. Eagle, J. Mu�oz, J. R. Clarke, B. Yan, B. Hand, P. Cagi, L. Chia, N. Goh, R. Palanikumar, L. El-Masri, S. Pe�acoba, G. V. Mahadevan, J. Kuranawai, C. Ghatala, R. Fink, J. N. Green, R. Waters, M. Vallat, W. Cheong, E. Choi, P. M. C. Drew, R. McDougall, A. Cappelen-Smith, C. Venkat, A. Mudd, P. Vicente, B. G. Davis, S. M. Edwards, L. Bremner, K. Blair, C. Loubiere, L. Fairall, P. Butt, A. Kalashyan, H. Nomani, A. Chen, C. H. Lloret, M. Mishra, S. Cordato, D. J. Thirunavukkarasu, S. Sivakumar, L. Miteff, F. Harrison, E. Mu�oz Rubio, P. L. D'Souza, A. Tseng, B. Fisicchia, L. Tai, I. Chiang, I. H. Kuan, A. Tsai, V. Hsu, A. Hsu, S. Spratt, N. J. Wu, T. Y. Lachapelle, N. Alchin, D. Lemmens, R. Shah, D. Sanjuan, E. Celestino, S. Chou, C. H. Tsai, C. K. Sung, Y. F. Tsai, C. L. Levi, C. R. Lin, Y. K. Kao, H. W. Tsai, C. H. Vuong, J. Thirugnanachandran, T. Hervet, M. V. Ombelet, F. Markus, H. S. Ma, H. Simmons, K. Bailey, P. Phan, T. Urbi, B. Demeestere, J. Kurakose, S. Martinez-Majander, N. R�ty, S. Tiainen, M. Sibolt, G. Bladin, C. Ivanoff, T. Jackson, D. Sanz, A. C. Selmes, C. Park, P. Phan, T. G. Garc�a, E. C. Bendall, C. Subramanian, G. Tang, S. C. Tsai, L. K. Yeh, S. J. Dewey, H. Chen, C. H. Chung, T. C. Johns, H. Lees, K. Wong, A. Muller, C. Skinner, G. McDonald, A. Molina, C. A. Gunathilagan, G. Natarajan, I. Coutts, S. Wong, J. Thomas, J. Menon, B. Kaste, M. Kenney, C. Mahant, N. Sun, M. C. Lee, J. T. Jeng, J. S. Strbian, D. Meretoja, A. Arenillas, J. F. Parsons, N. Buck, B. H. Devlin, M. J. Helou, J. Callaly, E. Cody, R. Brown, H. Butcher, K. S. O'Brien, B. Sabet, A. Wijeratne, T. Bivard, A. Grimley, R. S. Agarwal, S. Green, D. Olenko, L. Fink, J. Munshi, S. K. Tan, P. Donnan, G. A. MacIsaac, R. Wellings, T. Loiselle, A. Pepper, E. Miteff, F. Nguyen, T. Krishnamurthy, V. Ang, T. Alanati, K. Gangadharan, S. Zareie, H. Wilson, D. Dhimal, N. Guha, P. Starling, R. Dunkerton, S. Kleinig, T. J. He, J. Datta, R. Royan, A. Kerr, E. Kaauwai, L. Belevski, L. Mason, D. Ormond, S. De Lera Alfonso, M. C. Johnson, A. Pham, T. Rokaha, B. Evans, M. Senanayake, C. Thomas, G. Liu, J. Busch, T. Stuart, N. Berry-Norohna, A. Chung, M. Yassi, N. Khan, J. Valente, M. Sharobeam, A. Cooley, R. Araque, M. E. R. Harvey, J. Zhao, H. Alemseged, F. Williams, C. Winders, J. Ng, J. L. Miller, M. Balabanski, A. |
SWSLHD Author: | Parsons, Mark W. Sharma, Gagan Lin, Longting Cordato, Dennis J. |
Issue Date: | 2024 |
Journal: | The Lancet Neurology |
Abstract: | Background: Intravenous tenecteplase increases reperfusion in patients with salvageable brain tissue on perfusion imaging and might have advantages over alteplase as a thrombolytic for ischaemic stroke. We aimed to assess the non-inferiority of tenecteplase versus alteplase on clinical outcomes in patients selected by use of perfusion imaging. Methods: This international, multicentre, open-label, parallel-group, randomised, clinical non-inferiority trial enrolled patients from 35 hospitals in eight countries. Participants were aged 18 years or older, within 4·5 h of ischaemic stroke onset or last known well, were not being considered for endovascular thrombectomy, and met target mismatch criteria on brain perfusion imaging. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) by use of a centralised web server with randomly permuted blocks to intravenous tenecteplase (0·25 mg/kg) or alteplase (0·90 mg/kg). The primary outcome was the proportion of patients without disability (modified Rankin Scale 0-1) at 3 months, assessed via masked review in both the intention-to-treat and per-protocol populations. We aimed to recruit 832 participants to yield 90% power (one-sided alpha=0·025) to detect a risk difference of 0·08, with an absolute non-inferiority margin of -0·03. The trial was registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry, ACTRN12613000243718, and the European Union Clinical Trials Register, EudraCT Number 2015-002657-36, and it is completed. Findings: Recruitment ceased early following the announcement of other trial results showing non-inferiority of tenecteplase versus alteplase. Between March 21, 2014, and Oct 20, 2023, 680 patients were enrolled and randomly assigned to tenecteplase (n=339) and alteplase (n=341), all of whom were included in the intention-to-treat analysis (multiple imputation was used to account for missing primary outcome data for five patients). Protocol violations occurred in 74 participants, thus the per-protocol population comprised 601 people (295 in the tenecteplase group and 306 in the alteplase group). Participants had a median age of 74 years (IQR 63-82), baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score of 7 (4-11), and 260 (38%) were female. In the intention-to-treat analysis, the primary outcome occurred in 191 (57%) of 335 participants allocated to tenecteplase and 188 (55%) of 340 participants allocated to alteplase (standardised risk difference [SRD]=0·03 [95% CI -0·033 to 0·10], one-tailed pnon-inferiority=0·031). In the per-protocol analysis, the primary outcome occurred in 173 (59%) of 295 participants allocated to tenecteplase and 171 (56%) of 306 participants allocated to alteplase (SRD 0·05 [-0·02 to 0·12], one-tailed pnon-inferiority=0·01). Nine (3%) of 337 patients in the tenecteplase group and six (2%) of 340 in the alteplase group had symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage (unadjusted risk difference=0·01 [95% CI -0·01 to 0·03]) and 23 (7%) of 335 and 15 (4%) of 340 died within 90 days of starting treatment (SRD 0·02 [95% CI -0·02 to 0·05]). Interpretation: The findings in our study provide further evidence to strengthen the assertion of the non-inferiority of tenecteplase to alteplase, specifically when perfusion imaging has been used to identify reperfusion-eligible stroke patients. Although non-inferiority was achieved in the per-protocol population, it was not reached in the intention-to-treat analysis, possibly due to sample size limtations. Nonetheless, large-scale implementation of perfusion CT to assist in patient selection for intravenous thrombolysis in the early time window was shown to be feasible. Funding: Australian National Health Medical Research Council; Boehringer Ingelheim. � 2024 Elsevier Ltd |
ISSN: | 14744422 (ISSN) |
Digital object identifier: | 10.1016/S1474-4422(24)00206-0 |
URI: | https://swslhd.intersearch.com.au/swslhdjspui/handle/1/13005 |
Department: | Liverpool Hospital, Department of Neurology |
Appears in Collections: | Liverpool Hospital |
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