Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT06352619
Third Enhanced Control of Hypertension and Thrombectomy Stroke Domain Within ACT-GLOBAL Adaptive Platform Trial
Third Enhanced Control of Hypertension and Thrombectomy Stroke Domain Within A Multi-faCtorial, mulTi-arm, Multi-staGe, Randomised, gLOBal Adaptive pLatform Trial for Stroke (ACT-GLOBAL_ENCHANTED3/MT)
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 2,000 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- The George Institute · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Several clinical trials have produced variable conclusions regarding the effects of intensive blood pressure (BP) lowering in post-EVT acute ischaemic stroke (AIS) patients. Although two trials indicate harm from very intensive target-based treatment (SBP \<130 mmHg), the others neutral effects in the SBP range 140-160 mmHg. The ENCHANTED3/MT domain of the ACT-GLOBAL platform trial aims to test different approaches to the treatment of elevated SBP in post-EVT AIS patients to find an optimal BP management strategy. ENCHANTED3/MT will randomize (1:1:1) up to 2,000 patients with SBP ≥150 mmHg post-EVT to conservative (no or minimal SBP reduction by 5-10mmHg or a target of 175-180mmHg if very-high baseline SBP \[≥180mmHg\]), moderate (SBP reduction by 10-20mmHg or a target of 160 ± 5, whichever is higher; no control if low-high baseline SBP \[150-160mmHg\]), or intensive (SBP reduction by 30-50mmHg or a target of 140±5 mmHg, whichever is higher) BP management.
Detailed description
ACT-GLOBAL is an international, multi-factorial, multi-arm, multi-stage, randomized, adaptive platform trial designed to simultaneously evaluate multiple treatments that may improve outcomes in stroke. One domain is ENCHANTED3/MT aiming to compare three BP lowering management strategies in post-EVT AIS patients with elevated SBP determine the best approach to improve functional outcome. Background and Rationale - Different reperfusion status may have different BP patterns. A U-shaped correlation between post-EVT BP and outcomes may exist for patients who underwent recanalisation post-EVT. In addition, different BP lowering strategy may have different safety profiles and may potentially impact differently with regards to the risk of ICH for patients with reperfusion therapy. The controversial overall clinical effect seen in clinical trials, including ENCHANTED2/MT, OPTIMAL BP, BP TARGET, BEST II and ENCHANTED, does not resolve the question over the optimal BP control strategy following EVT. The evidence is insufficient to make sensible recommendations over the optimal BP management in this important clinical group. Thus, the Blood Pressure Domain (ENCHANTED3/MT) aims to test different treatment approaches to the control of elevated SBP post-EVT in AIS patients to find the optimal BP management that leads to improved functional status with reduced ICH and no other harms. ENCHANTED3/MT will randomize (1:1:1) up to 2,000 patients with SBP ≥150 mmHg post-EVT to the following three BP lowering management strategies. Primary outcome is modified Rankin scale (mRS) at 90 days analysed with utility-weighted mRS using a Bayesian hierarchical linear model. Adaptive analyses will be conducted 3-monthly with prespecified statistical triggers for superiority, inferiority and equivalence.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | Conservative SBP Control | No or minimal treatment; if there is a need to treat a patient with a very-high (\>180 mmHg) baseline SBP, then the SBP reduction is 5-10mmHg or a target is 175-180 mmHg |
| OTHER | Moderate SBP Control | If the patient has a very high (\>180 mmHg) or moderate high (160-180 mmHg) baseline SBP, SBP reduction is 10-20mmHg or a target of160±5 mmHg, which is higher; patients with low-high (150-160 mmHg) baseline SBP will not be treated |
| OTHER | Intensive SBP Control | SBP reduction by 30-50mmHg or a target of 140±5 mmHg, which is higher |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2024-10-11
- Primary completion
- 2026-05-01
- Completion
- 2026-05-01
- First posted
- 2024-04-08
- Last updated
- 2024-11-21
Locations
2 sites across 2 countries: Australia, Canada
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06352619. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.