A two stage phase 2 study with an interim analysis to provide evidence that subjects provided with early administration of NanO2 who are located at small rural spoke hospitals and identified with large vessel occlusion ischemic strokes as well as viable penumbra prior to transfer to larger hub hospitals and who continue dosing NanO2 until revascularization is achieved by intravenous alteplase and/or mechanical thrombectomy, will experience stroke recovery by shifting ischemic brain tissue to normal tissue pO2 environments.
Recent stroke studies have shown that subjects with Large Vessel Occlusion (LVO) ischemic stroke have rapid infarct growth. The investigators hypothesize that early administration of NanO2 in subjects with LVO ischemic stroke will maintain the viability of tissue in the penumbra until revascularization is achieved with intravenous alteplase and/or mechanical thrombectomy (MT). The rationale for administering the dose evaluated is: 1. The dose level is within the levels already tested in animals and humans.5-13 Volunteers received two IV bolus doses of 0.35 mL/kg of activated NanO2TM 24 hours apart and brain cancer subjects received daily doses of up to 0.17 mL/kg of inactivated NanO2TM.18 2. A completed trial of NanO2TM in acute ischemic stroke at the University of Arkansas had the high dose cohort receive three doses of NanO2 (0.17 mL/kg) 90 minutes apart and demonstrated safety at this dose. 3. Therapeutic reduction in stroke damage has been observed at dose levels of 0.1 mL/kg in rabbits.5-9,12 Since drug effects tend to correlate with body surface area/weight, one would predict that a dose of approximately 0.03 mL/kg should be effective in humans compared to rabbits.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
300
Subjects with large vessel occlusion stroke eligible for mechanical thrombectomy are randomized to placebo in association with standard of care
Subjects with large vessel occlusion stroke eligible for mechanical thrombectomy are randomized to DDFPe in association with standard of care
National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and Modified Rankin Scale
Both are established and accepted measures of stroke. NIHSS has a scale from 0 to 42 and mRS has a scale from 0 to 6. In both cases, a lower score represents less brain damage.
Time frame: 2 years
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