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About
The risk of recurrence is greatest immediately after stroke or Transient Ischaemic Attack (TIA). Existing prevention strategies (antithrombotic, lipid/blood pressure lowering, endarterectomy) reduce, not abolish, further events. Dual antiplatelet therapy - aspirin & clopidogrel (AC) for IHD, aspirin & dipyridamole (AD) for stroke, is superior to aspirin monotherapy. The investigators hypothesise that triple antiplatelet therapy (ACD) will be superior to AD in patients at high-risk of recurrence, providing bleeding does not become excessive.
Design: TARDIS is a multicentre, parallel-group, prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint, controlled trial. In the start-up phase, the investigators will assess over 3 years the safety, tolerability and feasibility of intensive therapy (ACD) versus guideline therapy (AD) given for 1 month in 750 patients with acute stroke/TIA. The main phase will then assess the safety and efficacy of ACD in up to 3500 patients. The primary outcome is ordinal stroke (fatal/severe non-fatal/mild/TIA/none) at 90 days. Secondary outcomes include death, MI, vascular events, function, bleeding, serious adverse events; sub-studies will assess cerebral emboli and platelet function.
Full description
2.1 Purpose To perform a randomised trial assessing the efficacy, safety and tolerability of intensive antiplatelet therapy (Asp+Dip+Clop) versus guideline antiplatelet therapy (Asp+Dip or Clop) in patients with recent ischaemic stroke or TIA and who are at high risk of recurrence.
2.2 Primary Objective To assess ordinal stroke severity at 90 days after short-term administration (1 month) of intensive antiplatelet therapy versus guideline therapy in patients with very recent ischaemic stroke or TIA.
2.3 Secondary Objectives
ii. it is feasible to administer intensive therapy acutely and is tolerable to take for 1 month, iii. intensive therapy is superior in respect of surrogate markers such as platelet function.
iv. intensive therapy improves functional outcome
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Adults at high risk of recurrent ischaemic stroke:
Age ≥ 50 years
Within 48 hours of ictus (24-48 hours if thrombolysed)
TIA with limb weakness and/or dysphasia lasting between 10 minutes and < 24 hours with no residual symptoms and presenting with any of the following
Note: Neuroimaging is not necessary for transient ischaemic attack. Crescendo TIA is > 1 TIA in one week and the onset time of last TIA is taken as time of ictus.
Ischaemic non cardioembolic stroke presenting with any of the following
Note: Neuroimaging is essential for ischaemic stroke to exclude intracranial haemorrhage and/or non stroke diagnosis
Informed consent from participant. If the participant is unable to give meaningful consent e.g. due to dysphasia, confusion, or reduced conscious level, proxy consent may be obtained from a relative, carer or legal representative.
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3,096 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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