Expert opinion on biological therapy
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The high fibrin specificity of Desmodus rotundus salivary plasminogen activator alpha1 (desmoteplase) renders it a promising candidate for the treatment of acute ischemic stroke. In the DIAS (Desmoteplase in Acute Ischemic Stroke) and DEDAS (Dose Escalation study of Desmoteplase in Acute ischemic Stroke) Phase II studies, doses of 90 microg/kg and 125 microg/kg desmoteplase were reported to have acceptable safety profiles, leading to potentially superior reperfusion compared with placebo, with possible clinical efficacy for up to 9 h after the onset of symptoms in patients with a significant ischemic penumbra selected from magnetic resonance perfusion-diffusion weighted mismatches imaging. However, a Phase III clinical trial (DIAS-2) was unable to detect any benefit from desmoteplase when given 3 - 9 h after stroke onset. ⋯ In this frame, why exactly desmoteplase should have specific advantages over tPA, is not clear. Taken together, these findings may also lead to the disappointing conclusion that vessel recanalization after 4.5 - 5 h from stroke onset may generally be inefficacious for tissue salvage. Nevertheless, other randomized Phase III clinical trials (DIAS-3 and DIAS-4) are currently under way with a planned sample size of 320 patients having vessel occlusion or high-grade stenosis on MRI or CT-angiography in the proximal cerebral arteries.