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Randomized, placebo-controlled, dose-ranging clinical trial of intravenous microplasmin in patients with acute ischemic stroke

Version 2 2024-06-04, 06:26
Version 1 2021-06-18, 11:04
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 06:26 authored by VNS Thijs, A Peeters, M Vosko, F Aichner, PD Schellinger, D Schneider, T Neumann-Haefelin, J Röther, A Davalos, N Wahlgren, P Verhamme
Background and Purpose— Microplasmin is a recombinant truncated form of human plasmin. It has demonstrated efficacy in experimental animal models of stroke and tolerability in healthy volunteers. We tested the tolerability of microplasmin in patients with acute ischemic stroke. Methods— In a multicenter, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled Phase II trial, 40 patients with ischemic stroke were treated with either placebo or active drug between 3 and 12 hours after symptom onset in a dose-finding design. Ten patients received placebo, 6 patients received a total dose of 2 mg/kg, 12 patients received a total dose of 3 mg/kg, and 12 patients received a total dose of 4 mg/kg. We studied the pharmacodynamics of microplasmin and its effect on the clinical and hemodynamic parameters of the patients. MRI was used as a surrogate marker and matrix metalloproteinases serum concentrations were used as markers of neurovascular integrity. The study was underpowered to detect clinical efficacy. Results— Microplasmin induced reversible effects on markers of systemic thrombolysis and neutralized α 2 -antiplasmin by up to 80%. It was well tolerated with one of 30 treated patients developing a fatal symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage. No significant effect on reperfusion rate or on clinical outcome was observed. Matrix metalloproteinase-2 levels were reduced in microplasmin-treated patients. Conclusions— Microplasmin was well tolerated and achieved neutralization of α 2 -antiplasmin. Further studies are warranted to determine whether microplasmin is an effective therapeutic agent for ischemic stroke.

History

Journal

Stroke

Volume

40

Pagination

3789-3795

Location

United States

ISSN

0039-2499

eISSN

1524-4628

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

12

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)