• Stroke · Dec 2013

    Editorial

    Stroke treatment academic industry roundtable: research priorities in the assessment of neurothrombectomy devices.

    • Jeffrey L Saver, Tudor G Jovin, Wade S Smith, Gregory W Albers, Jean-Claude Baron, Johannes Boltze, Joseph P Broderick, Lisa A Davis, Andrew M Demchuk, Salvatore DeSena, Jens Fiehler, Philip B Gorelick, Werner Hacke, Bill Holt, Reza Jahan, Hui Jing, Pooja Khatri, Chelsea S Kidwell, Kennedy R Lees, Michael H Lev, David S Liebeskind, Marie Luby, Patrick Lyden, J Thomas Megerian, J Mocco, Keith W Muir, Howard A Rowley, Richard M Ruedy, Sean I Savitz, Vitas J Sipelis, Samuel K Shimp, Lawrence R Wechsler, Max Wintermark, Ona Wu, Dileep R Yavagal, Albert J Yoo, and STAIR VIII Consortium.
    • From the Stroke Center and Department of Neurology, David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles (J.L.S.); Department of Neurology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Stroke Institute, PA (T.G.J.); Department of Neurology, University of California, San Francisco (W.S.S.); and Stroke Center and Department of Neurology, Stanford University School of Medicine, CA (G.W.A.).
    • Stroke. 2013 Dec 1;44(12):3596-601.

    Background And PurposeThe goal of the Stroke Treatment Academic Industry Roundtable (STAIR) meetings is to advance the development of stroke therapies. At STAIR VIII, consensus recommendations were developed for clinical trial strategies to demonstrate the benefit of endovascular reperfusion therapies for acute ischemic stroke.Summary Of ReviewProspects for success with forthcoming endovascular trials are robust, because new neurothrombectomy devices have superior reperfusion efficacy compared with earlier-generation interventions. Specific recommendations are provided for trial designs in 3 populations: (1) patients undergoing intravenous fibrinolysis, (2) early patients ineligible for or having failed intravenous fibrinolysis, and (3) wake-up and other late-presenting patients. Among intravenous fibrinolysis-eligible patients, key principles are that CT or MRI confirmation of target arterial occlusions should precede randomization; endovascular intervention should be pursued with the greatest rapidity possible; and combined intravenous and neurothrombectomy therapy is more promising than neurothrombectomy alone. Among patients ineligible for or having failed intravenous fibrinolysis, scientific equipoise was affirmed and the need to randomize all eligible patients emphasized. Vessel imaging to confirm occlusion is mandatory, and infarct core and penumbral imaging is desirable in later time windows. Additional STAIR VIII recommendations include approaches to test multiple devices in a single trial, utility weighting of disability end points, and adaptive designs to delineate time and tissue injury thresholds at which benefits from intervention no longer accrue.ConclusionsEndovascular research priorities in acute ischemic stroke are to perform trials testing new, highly effective neuro thrombectomy devices rapidly deployed in patients confirmed to have target vessel occlusions.

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