Phase II pilot randomised, factorial, short term dose escalation, open label, blinded intermediary endpoint trial, in two hospital centres in the UK, of tolerability and safety of cilostazol, isosorbide mononitrate, both or neither in patients with small vessel disease manifest as symptomatic small subcortical stroke.
A quarter of all ischaemic strokes are lacunar (small vessel) in type, about 35000 per annum in the United Kingdom, and due to an intrinsic, non-atheromatous, non-cardioembolic perforating cerebral arteriolar disease. 'Small vessel disease' also affects the brain diffusely, causing up to 40% of dementias, alone or mixed with Alzheimer's disease, 350,000+ patients estimated currently in the United Kingdom. There is no proven treatment: conventional antiplatelet drugs may be ineffective or even hazardous, antihypertensive treatment and statins have been disappointing. The disease mechanism is poorly understood but endothelial dysfunction, blood-brain barrier failure and vessel stiffness appear to contribute to the pathogenesis. Promising data available for licensed drugs with relevant modes of action, cilostazol (\>6000 stroke patients in the Asia Pacific region) and isosorbide mononitrate (ISMN, widely used in cardiac disease) support their testing in small vessel disease. This trial will be a phase 2, randomised, dose-escalation, factorial trial to test short-term administration of cilostazol, Isosorbide Mononitrate, both, or neither, to provide data on patient tolerability of dose (including headache, dizziness), safety (including blood pressure, platelet function), provide mechanistic evidence of efficacy (cerebrovascular reactivity, arterial compliance), and to inform the design of a larger phase 2-3 trial. The trial will recruit 60 patients with small vessel disease, in two expert stroke centres (Edinburgh and Nottingham) where there are suitable patients, expert stroke centres, established trials infrastructures and neuroimaging and platelet testing expertise. The trial will also advance methods to stratify patients by small vessel disease burden in routine practise and data on intermediary mechanistic outcomes to assist in planning future trials testing novel agents for either stroke or dementia.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
57
slow release nitric oxide donor that enhances vasodilation and widely used in angina prophyaxis
phosphodiesterase 3-inhibitor that enhances vessel wall function with weak antiplatelet effects
University of Edinburgh
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
University of Nottingham
Nottingham, United Kingdom
Tolerability proportion of patients able to tolerate the target dose
proportion of patients able to tolerate the target dose
Time frame: 8 weeks
Safety - bleeding
systemic or intracranial bleeding
Time frame: 12 weeks
Safety - recurrent stroke
recurrent vascular events,
Time frame: 12 weeks
Safety - death
death
Time frame: 12 weeks
Safety - blood pressure
reduction in blood pressure
Time frame: 8 weeks
Safety - bleeding
effect on platelet function assessed using p-selectin
Time frame: 8 weeks
Efficacy - cerebrovascular function
effect on cerebrovascular reactivity assessed using carbon dioxide challenge in magnetic resonance imaging
Time frame: 8 weeks
Efficacy - systemic arterial stiffness
effect on systemic large artery stiffness assessed with pulse wave velocity measurement
Time frame: 8 weeks
Tolerability Proportion of patients with headache that interferes with daily activities
Proportion of patients with headache that interferes with daily activities
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Time frame: 8 weeks
Tolerability Proportion of patients with dizziness that interferes with daily activities
Proportion of patients with dizziness that interferes with daily activities
Time frame: 8 weeks
Tolerability Proportion of patients with nausea that interferes with daily activities
Proportion of patients with nausea that interferes with daily activities
Time frame: 8 weeks
Tolerability Proportion of patients with palpitations
Proportion of patients with palpitations
Time frame: 8 weeks
Tolerability Proportion of patients with loose stools
Proportion of patients with loose stools
Time frame: 8 weeks
Tolerability Tablet count
Tablet count
Time frame: 8 weeks