Endovascular Treatment or Standard Medical Care for Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis(ESCORT)

NCT06583889 · Status: RECRUITING · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 224

Last updated 2024-09-04

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Background: It has not been extensively studied in differing populations that endovascular treatment (EVT) for acute and subacute CVST with multimodal imaging selection improves the functional outcome better than standard medical care based on the guidelines. Published experience with endovascular treatment is promising. However, its efficacy has not been confirmed and early selection criteria for EVT are unknown.

Objective:The main objective of the Endovascular treatment or Standard medical Care for Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis (ESCORT) trial is to determine if EVT improves the functional outcome of acute and subacute CVST patients with multimodal imaging selection.

Study Design:The ESCORT trial is a multicenter, prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded endpoint trial.

Study population: Patients are eligible if they have a radiologically criteria proven acute and subacute CVST, obvious symptoms of intracranial hypertension(lumbar puncture pressure≥250mmH2O).

Intervention: Patients will be randomized to receive either EVT or standard medical care (therapeutic doses of heparin). EVT consists of local application of alteplase or urokinase within the thrombosed sinuses, balloon angioplasty, and/or mechanical thrombectomy. Glasgow coma score, NIH stroke scale, ophthalmologic examination, Headache Impact Test-6(HIT-6), EuroQol-5 dimension-5 level(EQ-5D-5L) scale score, multimodal imaging and relevant laboratory parameters will be assessed at baseline.

Endpoints: The primary endpoint is the proportion with good prognosis at 3 months (definition: a. mRS≤1; b. headache score (\<50, HIT-6); c. Frisén=0 grade for papilledema; d. defect of field vision PMD\>-2dB). Secondary outcomes are three-months mRS, HIT-6,Frisén grade for papilledema, situation of EQ-5D-5L, mortality and recanalization rate. Major intracranial and extracranial hemorrhagic complications within one-week after the intervention are the principal safety outcomes. Results will be analyzed according to the'intention-to-treat' principle. Blinded assessors not involved in the treatment of the patient will assess endpoints with standardized questionnaires.

Study size: To detect a 20% relative increase of good prognosis (from 65 to 85%), 224 patients (112 in each treatment arm) have to be included (two-sided alpha, 80% power).

Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: Included patients may benefit directly from EVT. Complications of EVT, most notably intracranial hemorrhages, constitute the most important risk of the study.

Conditions

  • Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis

Interventions

DRUG

Heparin

The patients randomized to standard medical care will receive (or continue) either any type of body-weight adjusted low molecular weight heparin in therapeutic dose, or intravenous adjusted dose unfractionated heparin (aPTT value kept within 1 time the normal value), according to the existing international guidelines.

PROCEDURE

Endovascular treatment

Standard endovascular techniques to mechanically remove clot material, such as mechanical thrombectomy and/or balloon angioplasty and/or local application of alteplase or urokinase within the thrombosed sinuses.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Beijing Tiantan Hospital

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Dapeng Mo, MD · Beijing Tiantan Hospital

  • Zhongrong Miao, MD · Beijing Tiantan Hospital

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
18 Years
Max Age
60 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2024-08-09
Primary Completion
2029-01-31
Completion
2029-08-31

Countries

  • China

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT06583889 on ClinicalTrials.gov