Aggressive medical treatment with or without stenting in high-risk patients with intracranial artery stenosis (SAMMPRIS): the final results of a randomised trial

Colin P Derdeyn, Marc I Chimowitz, Michael J Lynn, David Fiorella, Tanya N Turan, L Scott Janis, Jean Montgomery, Azhar Nizam, Bethany F Lane, Helmi L Lutsep, Stanley L Barnwell, Michael F Waters, Brian L Hoh, J Maurice Hourihane, Elad I Levy, Andrei V Alexandrov, Mark R Harrigan, David Chiu, Richard P Klucznik, Joni M Clark, Cameron G McDougall, Mark D Johnson, G Lee Pride Jr, John R Lynch, Osama O Zaidat, Zoran Rumboldt, Harry J Cloft, Stenting and Aggressive Medical Management for Preventing Recurrent Stroke in Intracranial Stenosis Trial Investigators

Abstract

Background: Early results of the Stenting and Aggressive Medical Management for Preventing Recurrent stroke in Intracranial Stenosis trial showed that, by 30 days, 33 (14·7%) of 224 patients in the stenting group and 13 (5·8%) of 227 patients in the medical group had died or had a stroke (percentages are product limit estimates), but provided insufficient data to establish whether stenting offered any longer-term benefit. Here we report the long-term outcome of patients in this trial.

Methods: We randomly assigned (1:1, stratified by centre with randomly permuted block sizes) 451 patients with recent transient ischaemic attack or stroke related to 70-99% stenosis of a major intracranial artery to aggressive medical management (antiplatelet therapy, intensive management of vascular risk factors, and a lifestyle-modification programme) or aggressive medical management plus stenting with the Wingspan stent. The primary endpoint was any of the following: stroke or death within 30 days after enrolment, ischaemic stroke in the territory of the qualifying artery beyond 30 days of enrolment, or stroke or death within 30 days after a revascularisation procedure of the qualifying lesion during follow-up. Primary endpoint analysis of between-group differences with log-rank test was by intention to treat. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT 00576693.

Findings: During a median follow-up of 32·4 months, 34 (15%) of 227 patients in the medical group and 52 (23%) of 224 patients in the stenting group had a primary endpoint event. The cumulative probability of the primary endpoints was smaller in the medical group versus the percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and stenting (PTAS) group (p=0·0252). Beyond 30 days, 21 (10%) of 210 patients in the medical group and 19 (10%) of 191 patients in the stenting group had a primary endpoint. The absolute differences in the primary endpoint rates between the two groups were 7·1% at year 1 (95% CI 0·2 to 13·8%; p=0·0428), 6·5% at year 2 (-0·5 to 13·5%; p=0·07) and 9·0% at year 3 (1·5 to 16·5%; p=0·0193). The occurrence of the following adverse events was higher in the PTAS group than in the medical group: any stroke (59 [26%] of 224 patients vs 42 [19%] of 227 patients; p=0·0468) and major haemorrhage (29 [13%]of 224 patients vs 10 [4%] of 227 patients; p=0·0009).

Interpretation: The early benefit of aggressive medical management over stenting with the Wingspan stent for high-risk patients with intracranial stenosis persists over extended follow-up. Our findings lend support to the use of aggressive medical management rather than PTAS with the Wingspan system in high-risk patients with atherosclerotic intracranial arterial stenosis.

Funding: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) and others.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00576693.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts of interest

All other authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1. Trial profile
Figure 1. Trial profile
PTAS=percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and stenting. *Months after enrolment when PTAS was done: 0·1, 0·9, 2·2, 2·6, 3·2, 3·8, 6·5, 8·2, 14·1. †See appendix for length of follow-up for these patients.
Figure 2. Patients achieving target systolic blood…
Figure 2. Patients achieving target systolic blood pressure (A) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (B) throughout the trial
(A) Target systolic blood pressure was

Figure 3. Cumulative probability of a primary…

Figure 3. Cumulative probability of a primary endpoint by treatment

PTAS=percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and stenting.

Figure 3. Cumulative probability of a primary endpoint by treatment
PTAS=percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and stenting.
Figure 3. Cumulative probability of a primary…
Figure 3. Cumulative probability of a primary endpoint by treatment
PTAS=percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and stenting.

Source: PubMed

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