Large-artery stenosis plays an important role in the occurrence of ischemic stroke. The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intensive antiplatelet therapy versus standard antiplatelet therapy and immediate high-intensity statin therapy (80mg atorvastatin) versus delayed high-intensity statin therapy (40mg atorvastatin) and intensive antiplatelet combined with immediate high-intensity statin therapy (80mg atorvastatin) versus standard antiplatelet combined with delayed high-intensity statin therapy (40mg atorvastatin) in reducing the risk of stroke at 90 days in patients with acute and high-risk symptomatic extracranial or intracranial arterial stenosis.
Large-artery atherosclerotic stenosis is the main cause of ischemic stroke, especially in Asian population. However, targeted treatment evidence for large-artery atherosclerotic stenosis is limited according to the current guidelines. And also, randomized trial for statin therapy in patients with acute large arterial stenosis at early stage is still limited. The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intensive antiplatelet therapy versus standard antiplatelet therapy in reducing the risk of stroke at 90 days in patients with acute and high-risk symptomatic extracranial or intracranial arterial stenosis; the efficacy and safety of immediate high-intensity statin therapy (80mg atorvastatin) versus delayed high-intensity statin therapy (40mg atorvastatin) in reducing the risk of stroke at 90 days in patients with acute and high-risk symptomatic extracranial or intracranial arterial stenosis; and the efficacy and safety of intensive antiplatelet combined with immediate high-intensity statin therapy (80mg atorvastatin) versus standard antiplatelet combined with delayed high-intensity statin therapy (40mg atorvastatin) in reducing the risk of stroke at 90 days in patients with acute and high-risk symptomatic extracranial or intracranial arterial stenosis. This trial is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter, 2×2 factorial designed clinical trial. 6100 patients in 250 centers in China will be enrolled with one of the following situations (1) Mild ischemic stroke (NIHSS 4\~5) within 24 hours of onset meets any of the following imaging conditions: a) Acute single cerebral infarction with criminal intracranial and extracranial atherosclerotic stenosis (stenosis rate ≥50%),b) Acute multiple cerebral infarction (considered to be caused by large artery atherosclerosis, including non-stenotic vulnerable plaque);Or (2) Moderate-to-high-risk TIA (ABCD2≥4) or mild ischemic stroke (NIHSS≤5) within 24 to 72 hours of onset meets any of the following imaging conditions: a) Medium and high risk TIA with criminal intracranial and extracranial atherosclerotic stenosis (stenosis rate ≥50%),b) Acute single cerebral infarction with criminal intracranial and extracranial atherosclerotic stenosis (stenosis rate ≥50%),c) Acute multiple cerebral infarction (considered to be caused by large artery atherosclerosis, including non-stenotic vulnerable plaque) . Patients will be randomly assigned into 4 groups according to the ratio of 1:1:1:1: 1. Intensive antiplatelet therapy + immediate high-intensity statin therapy (80mg atorvastatin) 2. Intensive antiplatelet therapy + delayed high-intensity statin therapy (40mg atorvastatin) 3. Standard antiplatelet therapy + immediate high-intensity statin therapy (80mg atorvastatin) 4. Standard antiplatelet therapy + delayed high-intensity statin therapy (40mg atorvastatin) Face to face interviews will be made at baseline, 7, 14 (or hospital discharge), 90 ± 7 days and 12th month ± 14 days after randomization. Survival curves will be estimated for the primary outcome using the Kaplan-Meier procedure and compared using a Cox regression model Wald test, stratified by the opposite arm of the factorial design. Safety outcomes will be calculated using the Kaplan-Meier curve to simulate the 3-month cumulative risk, and the Cox proportional hazards model to calculate the HR and 95% confidence interval. Primary outcome is defined as stroke (including hemorrhagic and ischemic stroke). Secondary outcomes include composite vascular events (stroke, myocardial infarction, and cardiovascular death); ischemic stroke; transient ischemic attack; myocardial infarction; vascular death; all-cause death; poor functional outcome (mRS 2-6); and quality of life (EQ-5D scale). Safety outcomes, relating to antiplatelet therapy (i.e. bleeding, intracranial hemorrhage, and adverse events) and statin therapy (i.e. hepatotoxicity, muscle toxicity and adverse events) will be investigated.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
6,100
Day 1:clopidogrel 300mg/day+ aspirin100-300mg/ day Day2 - 21: clopidogrel 75mg/day+ aspirin 100mg/day Day22 - 90: clopidogrel 75mg/day+aspirin placebo
Day 1: Aspirin 100-300mg/day + clopidogrel placebo Day 2 - 90: Aspirin 100mg/day+ clopidogrel placebo
Day 1 - 21:Atorvastatin calcium 80mg/day Day 22 - 90:Atorvastatin calcium 40mg/day
Day 1 - 3:Atorvastatin calcium placebo Day 4 - 21:Atorvastatin calcium 40mg/day + Atorvastatin calcium placebo Day 22 - 90:Atorvastatin calcium 40mg/day
Tiantan Hospital
Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China
Anshan Central Hospital
Anshan, China
General Hospital of Anshan Iron and Steel Company
Anshan, China
Anyang People's Hospital
Anyang, China
Baoding First Central Hospital
Baoding, China
Beijing Hepingli Hospital
Stroke
Symptoms and signs of acute neurological deficits caused by sudden focal or whole brain, spinal cord or retinal vascular damage, which are related to cerebral circulatory disorders, including hemorrhagic and ischemic stroke
Time frame: 90 days
Composite vascular events
stroke (including hemorrhagic and ischemic stroke), myocardial infarction, and cardiovascular death.
Time frame: 90 days
Ischemic stroke
An acute focal infarction of the brain or retina. Criteria:(1) acute onset of a new focal neurological deficit with clinical or imaging evidence of infarction lasting more than 24 hours and not attributable to a non-ischemic etiology (not associated with brain infection, trauma, tumor, seizure, severe metabolic disease, or degenerative neurological disease); or (2) acute onset of a new focal neurological deficit and not attributable to a non-ischemic etiology lasting less than 24 hours, but accompanied by neuroimaging evidence of new brain infarction; or, (3) rapid worsening of an existing focal neurological deficit (an increase in NIHSS of ≥4 on the basis of a primary ischemic stroke, excluding hemorrhagic transformation or symptomatic cranial disease after infarction) lasting more than 24 hours and not attributable to a non-ischemic etiology, and accompanied by new ischemic changes on brain MRI or CT.
Time frame: 90 days
Transient ischemic attack
A neurological deficit of sudden onset, resolving completely, attributed to focal brain or retinal ischemia without evidence of associated acute focal infarction of the brain. Criteria: rapid onset of a focal neurological deficit that is without evidence of acute focal infarction of the brain, and is not attributable to a non-ischemic etiology (brain infection, trauma, tumor, seizure, severe metabolic disease, or degenerative neurological disease)
Time frame: 90 days
Myocardial infarction
Acute myocardial infarction is diagnosed by the third edition of the international general diagnostic criteria (Glob Heart. 2012 Dec;7(4):275-95)
Time frame: 90 days
Vascular death
Vascular death includes stroke, sudden cardiac death, acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, pulmonary embolism, heart / cerebrovascular intervention or surgery (death unrelated to acute MI) and other cardiovascular causes of death \[such as: Arrhythmia irrelevant with sudden cardiac death, aortic aneurysm rupture, or peripheral artery disease. Any death of unknown/unclear cause that occurs within 30 days after stroke, myocardial infarction, or cardio-cerebrovascular operation/surgery will be regarded as death due to stroke, myocardial infarction, or cardio-cerebrovascular operation/surgery, respectively.
Time frame: 90 days
All-cause death
All-cause death
Time frame: 90 days
Poor functional outcome
The modified Rankin Scale (mRS)= 2-6
Time frame: 90 days
Quality of life (EQ-5D scale)
EQ-5D scale index score ≤0.5
Time frame: 90 days
Change of atherosclerotic plaque using high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (HR-MRI)
Change of atherosclerotic plaque using high-resolution magnetic resonance 。 Patients in HR-MRI subgroup only
Time frame: 90 days
Early Neurological Deficits
NIHSS score increase of no less than 2points
Time frame: 7 days
Ordinal stroke or TIA
The new stroke or TIA is classified on a six-level ordered category scale combined vascular events with mRS score at 90 days or at 1year, respectively: fatal stroke (stroke with subsequent death), severe stroke (stroke followed by mRS of 4-5), moderate stroke (stroke followed by mRS of 2-3), mild stroke (stroke followed by mRS of 0-1), TIA and no stroke/TIA.
Time frame: 90 days
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Beijing, China
Benxi Central Hospital
Benxi, China
First Hospital of Changsha
Changsha, China
Second people's Hospital of Hunan Province
Changsha, China
Xiangya Third Hospital of Central South University
Changsha, China
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