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PREhospital Routage of Acute STroke Patients With Suspected Large Vessel Occlusion: Mothership Versus Drip and Ship (PRESTO-F)

C

Caen University Hospital

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Stroke

Treatments

Other: mothership

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04121013
2018-A02873-52

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: The outcome of ischemic stroke is related to the brain lesion volume and this volume of infarction is directly related to the time to reperfusion, which therefore depends on the time to initiation of therapy. Acute ischemic stroke is treated medically with the administration of intravenous rtPA, but recent randomized controlled trials have shown the efficacy of mechanical thrombectomy and is now the new gold standard in ischemic stroke. This new therapeutic strategy has created two possibilities for pre-hospital decision-making: i/ transport the patient directly to the nearest stroke unit to receive alteplase and then if indicated perform a thrombectomy (drip and ship) or ii/ bypassing thrombolysis centres in favour of endovascular thrombectomy (mothership).

Objective: To compare cost/effectiveness of transfer to the closest local stroke centre or telemedicine hub to direct transfer to the comprehensive stroke cent(CSC) in patients acute stroke with suspected large vessel occlusion.

Medical and economic expected impact: We hypothesize that direct transportation to CSC is associated with better clinical outcome in case of acute ischaemic stroke due to intracranial large vessel occlusion. However, we have to demonstrate that this approach is not associated with time from onset harm in patients not eligible to mechanical thrombectomy.

Full description

Design: Multicenter, two-arm, prospective, open, blinded end-point (PROBE), randomized, clinical trial

Primary endpoint: Incremental cost-utility ratio at 12 months. Secondary endpoints: modified Rankin scale and EuroQoL5D scale at 3 months.

Eligibility criteria: A call to the emergency medical assistance service, 18 years and older, severe acute stroke symptoms, transportation time from scene to the CSC longer than time to go to the nearest stroke unit or telemedicine hub, transportation time from scene to the CSC compatible with IV thrombolysis, known time from onset, RACE score (assessed by medical emergency technicians) ≥5.

Experimental arm: direct transportation to the CSC. Control arm: transfer to the closest local stroke centre or telemedicine hub.

Sample size: 800 patients, 400 for each arm.

Enrollment

800 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • A call to the emergency medical assistance service;
  • age> 18y,
  • known time of stroke onset;
  • transportation time from scene to the CSC longer than time to go to the nearest stroke unit or telemedicine hub;
  • transportation time from scene to the CSC compatible with IV thrombolysis;
  • known time from onset, RACE score ≥5.

Exclusion criteria

  • transportation time from scene to the CSC longer than time to go to the nearest stroke unit or telemedicine hub.
  • no ambulance available
  • bedridden patient

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

800 participants in 2 patient groups

Mothership
Active Comparator group
Description:
Acute stroke patients with suspected large vessel occlusion will be directly transferred to the nearest transportation to the endovascular center
Treatment:
Other: mothership
drip'n'ship
No Intervention group
Description:
Acute stroke patients with suspected large vessel occlusion will be transferred to the closest local stroke centre or telemedicine hub as done with the current stroke protocol

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Richard Macrez, Dr; emmanuel touze, Pr

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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