Medical College of Wisconsin
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Clinical trial design for endovascular ischemic stroke intervention. Neurology 2012 Sep 25;79(13 Suppl 1):S221-33

Date

10/04/2012

Pubmed ID

23008403

Pubmed Central ID

PMC4109233

DOI

10.1212/WNL.0b013e31826992cf

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84867568003 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   4 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trials have significant impact on clinical practice. The ultimate goal of a clinical trial of therapy for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) is to compare 2 interventions. Challenges may include interventional therapy standardization, enrollment rate, patient selection, biases, data and safety monitoring, reporting, and financial and logistical support.

METHOD: Selected randomized and single-arm prospective AIS trial designs. Clinical trial elements and their challenges are reviewed. Innovative designs and proposed recommendations to overcome some of the specific challenges and limitations are discussed.

RESULTS: AIS therapy trials have specific challenges related to ethical issues, enrollment rate, outcome measures, limited time to treatment, efficacy, safety, and limited or variable operator experience with complex technology in a delicate end organ. Proposed suggestions for improving trial design include the following: incorporation of a lead-in phase; careful patient and outcome measure selection; historical, concurrent, or hybrid controls; open data access; and a Bayesian approach. An open data paradigm may facilitate creation of computerized prediction models for future trials (minimizing cost by decreasing sample size or providing futility analyses and directing resources to other trials). Collaborative, consortium, and network infrastructures may allow more effective and efficient study completion. Self-learning, self-correcting trials with intrinsic flexibility to adapt may help future clinical trial design in AIS.

CONCLUSION: The randomized clinical trial design in AIS endovascular therapy is challenging. Lead-in phases, careful patient selection, use of innovative outcome measures, control groups, and newer clinical trial design may enhance conduct of future trials, their validity, and their results.

Author List

Zaidat OO, Liebeskind DS, Edgell RC, Amlie-Lefond CM, Kalia JS, Alexandrov AV



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Animals
Brain Ischemia
Clinical Protocols
Clinical Trials as Topic
Early Medical Intervention
Endovascular Procedures
Humans
Stroke