• Int J Stroke · Feb 2012

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    A randomized placebo controlled trial of early treatment of acute ischemic stroke with atorvastatin and irbesartan.

    • Christopher Beer, David Blacker, Michael Bynevelt, Graeme J Hankey, and Ian B Puddey.
    • Western Australian Centre for Health and Ageing, University of Western Australia, Perth, WA, Australia. christopher.beer@uwa.edu.au
    • Int J Stroke. 2012 Feb 1;7(2):104-11.

    BackgroundCholesterol and blood pressure lowering therapies are effective in the secondary prevention of ischemic stroke.AimTo determine whether 30 days of treatment with atorvastatin, or irbesartan, initiated within 96 h of symptom onset improves recovery from acute ischemic stroke.MethodsEighty-one patients with acute ischemic stroke participated in this double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial of atorvastatin (80 mg) vs. placebo, and/or irbesartan (150 mg) vs. placebo. Fifty-two patients (randomized 53 ± 22 h after onset of symptoms) completed the 30-day primary outcome follow-up.ResultsThe primary outcome, maximal brain infarct size at days 3 and 30 measured by perfusion computed tomography, was not significantly altered by random assignment to irbesartan (1088 (IQR 216, 2594) mm² at day 3, compared with 398 (144, 2053) mm² among the placebo group, P= 0.79 controlling for baseline values; and 822 (159, 1717) mm² at day 30, cf 280 (76, 1330) mm²; P=0.63); or atorvastatin (454 (107, 1765) mm² cf 825 (265, 2509) mm² at day 3; P= 0.33; and 462 (43, 1399) mm² cf 280 (128, 1559) mm² at day 30, P= 0.79). There were no other significant differences among the treatment groups with the exception of: • high sensitivity C-reactive protein concentrations, which were lower in the irbesartan treatment group at day 30 (mean difference 12.6 mg/L; 95% CI: -25.1, - 0.1; P= 0.048); and • the mean cerebral blood flow in the affected cerebral hemisphere at 30 days after stroke, which was significantly reduced by random assignment to irbesartan compared with placebo in both the affected cerebral hemisphere (-7.5 mL/100 mL/min (95% CI: -1.7 to - 13.4, P= 0.01)) and in the unaffected hemisphere (- 7.3 mL/100 mL/min (95% CI: - 1.3, -13.4; P= 0.02)). Atorvastatin therapy was well tolerated, but irbesartan therapy was associated with an increased rate of withdrawal from therapy (n=10 (29%), compared with n=3 (9%) who withdrew from placebo, P= 0.04).ConclusionsTreatment with atorvastatin and irbesartan, initiated on day 3 after acute ischemic stroke, did not appear to substantially modify infarct growth.

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