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Evaluating Oral Peri-operative Acetylsalicylic Acid in Subjects Undergoing Endovascular Coiling-only of Unruptured Brain Aneurysms (EVOLVE)

U

University of Calgary

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 3

Conditions

Unruptured Cerebral Aneurysm

Treatments

Drug: Acetyl Salicylate

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04192955
Version 2.0

Details and patient eligibility

About

This trial is a is a prospective, randomized (1:1) placebo-controlled, clinical trial with blinded endpoint assessment of 440 participants with unruptured brain aneurysm planned for endovascular treatment using coiling-only approach (primary coiling or using balloon-assistance but not stenting) to test if oral acetylsalicylic acid (325 mg/ day for a total of 5 days) is superior placebo in preventing clinical and silent strokes. The primary outcome is a clinical or silent stroke at the time of discharge assessed by clinical examination and MRI brain. Participants will return to the clinic or be contacted by phone for the end of study procedures on Day 90 to collect functional outcome data.

Full description

Endovascular aneurysm treatment has become the mainstay of treatment of unruptured brain aneurysms. Since the introduction of Guglielmi detachable coils in the late 1980s, thousands of procedures are performed annually worldwide. The expanding endovascular armamentarium with the use of balloon-assisted coiling, stents (either in stent-assisted coiling or flow-diversion), and unassisted coiling-only procedures made it possible to treat aneurysms of almost all intracranial locations, shapes, and sizes.

Thromboembolic complications are potential adverse events whenever catheters are introduced into the intracranial arteries. Diagnostic and interventional neurological procedures, such as diagnostic and therapeutic cerebral angiograms may lead to ischemic strokes of varying frequency and severity. Luckily, most of the thromboembolic events do not cause a clinical stroke. Instead, tiny infarction signals are seen on Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI MRI) of the brain without neurological signs or symptoms. These are often labelled as silent (or covert) strokes. These imaging surrogates have been used to compare the safety and efficacy of various endovascular procedures and techniques. In a Canadian cohort, heparin bolus during aneurysm coiling was associated with significantly less DWI load on post-coiling MRI. This supports the notion that most of these lesions are caused by thrombi, as opposed to bubbles.

There is limited direction from available guidelines regarding the use of anticoagulation or antiplatelet agents to prevent thromboembolic complications associated with endovascular treatment of brain aneurysms. This resulted in huge variability of the protocols used for anticoagulation and antiplatelet therapies before, during and after coil embolization of brain aneurysms. Most of the current practices are extrapolated from coronary literature.

Platelet inhibition is an effective strategy to minimize the rate of thromboembolism. Antiplatelet treatment has been routinely used before coronary angioplasty to reduce the risk of thromboembolic events. The different action of ASA from that of anticoagulants gives it an additive effect to heparin alone in neuro-interventional procedures. This notion is supported by observations from multiple retrospective and prospective studies.

We will perform a prospective, randomized (1:1) placebo-controlled, clinical trial with blinded endpoint assessment of 440 participants with unruptured brain aneurysm planned for endovascular treatment using coiling-only approach (primary coiling or using balloon-assistance but not stenting) to test if oral acetylsalicylic acid (325 mg/ day for a total of 5 days: 3 days prior and two days after and including the coiling procedure day) is superior placebo in preventing clinical and silent strokes. The primary outcome is a clinical or silent stroke at the time of discharge assessed by clinical examination and MRI brain.

Enrollment

440 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Unruptured intracranial aneurysm suitable for coiling-only (primary coiling or balloon-assisted) as a primary treatment.
  • Functionally independent at baseline (modified Rankin scale <3).
  • Informed consent and availability of the subject for the entire study period.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Planned complex aneurysm treatment including use of any device that requires post-operative antiplatelet therapy (stent-assisted coiling or flow-diverter device), or endovascular vessel sacrifice.
  2. Dissecting or mycotic brain aneurysm.
  3. Any ongoing ischemic symptoms such as transient ischemic attacks, minor strokes, or stroke-in-evolution within 2 weeks before randomization.
  4. Allergy or contraindication to ASA.
  5. Unable to take study drug orally for any reason.
  6. Subjects already taking single or dual antiplatelet, warfarin, or any of the non-Vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants.
  7. Subjects unable to undergo MRI imaging for any reason (e.g., severe claustrophobia or presence of metals).
  8. Any other medical condition that the site investigator deems would put the subject at excessive risk by participation in the study (e.g. active bleeding, symptomatic peptic ulcer disease, liver or kidney failure, thrombocytopenia or coagulopathy) or an expected life expectancy less than one year, or that would result in an inability to collect radiological outcomes and clinical outcomes at 90 days.
  9. Pregnancy or breastfeeding.
  10. Prior enrollment in EVOLVE trial for another aneurysm.
  11. Participation in another clinical trial of an investigational drug, device or procedure if the subject received the trial drug, device or procedure in the preceding 30 days from the anticipated coiling date.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

440 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Active
Active Comparator group
Description:
Acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) will be given orally at a dose of 324 mg to be taken daily starting 3 days prior to the planned coiling procedure day, on the procedure day, and for one-day post-procedure.
Treatment:
Drug: Acetyl Salicylate
Control
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Lactose100-mg tablets to be taken daily starting 3 days prior to the planned coiling procedure day, on the procedure day, and for one-day post-procedure.
Treatment:
Drug: Acetyl Salicylate

Trial contacts and locations

9

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Central trial contact

Karla Ryckborst, RN BN CCRP; Mohammed A Almekhlafi, MD MSc FRCPC

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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