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ISSN 0044-4588 KORSAKOV'S JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY Volume 11 2004 STROKE Journal Supplement MediaSphera CEREBROLYSIN IN ISCHEMIC STROKE TREATMENT Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Study of Cerebrolysin Safety and Efficacy in Treatment of Acute Ischemic Stroke V.I. SKVORTSOVA, L.V. STAKHOVSKAYA, L.V. GUBSKY, N.A. SHAMALOV, I.V. TIKHONOVA, A.S. SMYCHKOV A randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled study of Cerebrolysin safety and efficacy in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke V.I. SKVORTSOVA, L.V. STAKHOVSKAYA, L.V. GUBSKY, N.A. SHAMALOV, I.V. TIKHONOVA, A.S. SMYCHKOV Chair of Fundamental and Clinical Neurology, Russian State Medical University, Moscow 36 patients with ischemic stroke aged 45-85 years, who were admitted to a hospital within the first 12 hours of stroke onset, became subjects of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of Cerebrolysin safety and efficacy. Patients (12 persons in each group) were assigned placebo or one of Cerebrolysin doses: 10 and 50 ml applied along with a unified baseline therapy. By day 30 of stroke, there was revealed acceleration of regression of neurological disorders according to used clinical scales in patient groups that received Cerebrolysin as compared with a placebo patient group (р<0.05). Patients who received Cerebrolysin and had the brain lesion volume of 7 to 64 сm 3 demonstrated decrease in the lesion growth on day 3 of the disease (р<0.05). An acute pharmacological test revealed decrease in the size and prevalence of θ- and δ-foci in 72.7% of cases in a patient group that received 50 ml of Cerebrolysin (р<0.05 versus the placebo patient group). In no case Cerebrolysin treatment, including in the dose of 50 ml, caused manifestation of symptoms of paroxysmal brain activity. The performed study confirmed safety and efficacy of high-dose Cerebrolysin in treatment of ischemic stroke patients. Keywords: ischemic stroke, neuroprotection, cerebrolysin The aim of the study was to assess safety and efficacy of the neuroprotective drug Cerebrolysin in acute ischemic stroke. Thirty-six patients with ischemic stroke in carotid artery territory aged 45-85 years, were eligible for inclusion in the trial if they were admitted to the hospital within the first 12h after stroke onset. Patients were randomly and blindly assigned to placebo (n=12) or 1 or 2 dosages of Cerebrolysin: 10 ml/d (n=12) and 50 ml/d (n=12) for 10 days with concomitant standard basic treatment in each group. A quantitative time-related analysis of the dynamics of neurological deficit revealed the tendency towards acceleration of improvement assessed by the Clinical Global Impression Scale and NIHSS in both Cerebrolysin groups by 30 day of the treatment. The significant reduction in the volume of MRI ischemic focus was shown in both Cerebrolysin groups (p<0.05 vs. Placebo) on day 3. Acute pharmacological test revealed a decrease (p<0.05 vs. Placebo) of the size and Spread of delta and theta foci in 72.7% patients, receiving 50 ml/d of Cerebrolysin. In none of the cases, Cerebrolysin treatment provoked any paroxysmal activity on EEG. The trial demonstrated safety, efficacy and good tolerability of highdose Cerebrolysin in the treatment of ischemic stroke. Key words: ischemic stroke, neuroprotection, cerebrolysin Therapy in an acute period of ischemic stroke is aimed mainly at reducing functional disintegration of the central nervous system (CNS) and neurological deficit. In this case metabolic therapy plays the leading role [1]. Due to the possibility of brain tissue survival in the penumbra zone within at least 48 - 72 hours of stroke onset, special emphasis is laid on elaboration of new efficient methods of secondary neuroprotection directed to interruption of delayed mechanisms of cell death (long- STROKE, No. 11, 2004 CEREBROLYSIN IN ISCHEMIC STROKE TREATMENT term effects of ischemia): excessive synthesis of nitric oxide and oxidant stress; activation of microglia and microglia-related cytokine imbalance, immune shifts, local inflammation, disturbances of microcirculation and blood-brain barrier; trophic dysfunction and apoptosis [1, 2]. Neuropeptides, endogenous regulators of CNS functions, play especially important role. Main mechanisms of action of Cerebrolysin, a neuropeptide-based drug, are a modulating effect on energy metabolism (decrease in brain oxygen demand, intensification of aerobic metabolism, reduction of the lactate level in neural tissue, optimization of mitochondrial processes), a neurotrophic effect and modulation of activity of endogenous growth factors, as well as interaction with neuropeptide and neuromediator systems [3, 4]. Cerebrolysin also has antioxidant properties as a result of its ability to inhibit processes of free-radical oxidation and lipid peroxidation [4]. In the late 80th of the last century, expediency of high-dose (more than 10 ml) Cerebrolysin administration was substantiated for the purpose of implementation of its neuroprotective properties [2, 5]. Outcomes of a Cerebrolysin trial carried out in several research centres in Austria, which enrolled patients in an acute period of carotid ischemic stroke, demonstrated advantages of a 30—50 ml day dose versus a 10—30 ml dose. Administration of high doses of Cerebrolysin (up to 50 ml) led to more profound regression of neurological signs in patients by the end of the acute period and to reliable improvement of functional recovery and daily living activities over the long-term period [6]. The purpose of this study was to conduct a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of Cerebrolysin safety and efficacy in treatment of ischemic stroke patients in the acute period. Materials and Methods The study was conducted with the permission of the Committee on Ethical Issues of the Russian State Medical University (RSMU). All patients and their relatives signed an informed consent form to participate in the study. The study enrolled patients aged 45 - 85 years with the first ischemic stroke in their life that happened in the system of the internal carotid artery, who were admitted to a neuroreanimation unit within 12 hours of stroke onset. The following patients were excluded from the trial: patients with complete regression of neurological symptomatology within 4 hours of its occurrence; patients with hemorrhagic stroke or stroke in the vertebral-basilar system with blood pressure of 200/100 mm of mercury; patients with disorders of consciousness to the state of sopor or coma; patients with acute myocardial infarction, impaired cardial function, renal and hepatic insufficiency, a priori marked dementia; pregnant female patients and patients who participated in other trials. The studied population was made up of 36 patients (19 male, 17 female; 69.1± 10.3 years of age). Left-side localisation of the brain lesion was determined in 22 patients, right-side – in 14 patients. 10 patients were transported to a hospital within 6 hours of stroke onset, 26 patients – within 6 - 12 hours. All patients were randomly and blindly assigned to receive either placebo or Cerebrolysin at a dose of either 10 ml or 50 ml (12 patients in each group). The medication, dissolved in 40 ml of a physiologic saline, was administered intravenously dropwise during 1 hour for the first 10 days of the disease along with maximally unified baseline therapy that included acetylsalicylic acid at a dose of 100 mg/day, hemodilution, pentoxifylline, low-dose heparin (if necessary). STROKE, No. 11, 2004 CEREBROLYSIN IN ISCHEMIC STROKE TREATMENT Calcium channel-blocking agents, pyracetam, medications with neurotrophic and modulator properties were not used in the treatment. Complementary NIH multiple point scales, the Modified Rankin Scale and the Clinical Global Impression Scale were used to objectify severity of the disease condition, intensity of focal neurological deficit and assessment of clinical indices dynamics. Functional recovery was evaluated by the Barthel Index. The neurological status and the level of functional recovery were evaluated at admission of patients (before commencement of therapy), on days 3, 6, 10 and 30 of the disease. The death rate and side effects of the medication were traced during the whole period of study (30 days). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain was performed before commencement of therapy within the first 12 hours of the disease occurrence and repeated on days 3, 10 and 30 (Ellipse 0.15 Т MR imaging system, Az Corporation, Russia). There were performed axial T2weighted images with fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR), coronal T2-weighted images (ТSЕ) and sagittal T1-weighted images (GRЕ). Scanning was performed with 7 mm section thickness and 1 mm spaces between sections. On FLAIR-images, the brain infarct area had a high signal; therefore those images were used to determine the brain lesion volume with the help of a package of Osiris 3.1 application programs (the Hospital of the University, Geneva). To study Cerebrolysin effect on the brain functional status, EEG-monitoring was carried out based on 19-channel paperless Neurocartograph electroencephalograph (MBN Ltd., Russia) according to the standard procedure before the first Cerebrolysin infusion, during the infusion and within 2.5 hours after the infusion, and then on days 3, 6, 10, 30 of stroke onset. Parameters of intensity of α-, β-, δ- and θ-rhythms both in ischemic and intact cerebral hemispheres were analysed. Dipole characteristics of EEG focal changes were assessed with the help of the Brain Loc program. Statistical treatment of data obtained was performed with the help of a package of Statistica6.0 and Biostat programs. Reliability of differences in average values was determined with the help of the Mann-Whitney nonparametric t-test; Spearman's rank correlation coefficients were calculated. A two-sided significance level of 5% was chosen for all tests. Results and Discussion Analysed groups were comparable by etiological agents and hospitalisation terms, age and sex composition, severity of patients’ condition under NIH and Rankin Modified Scales. At admission to a hospital, there were no differences revealed in patients in terms of the brain lesion volume which was 7 to 64 cm3 in the majority of patients (Table 1). The conducted study confirmed Cerebrolysin safety, however one female patient, who received Cerebrolysin in a dose of 50 ml, had an attack of acute retrosternal pain and dyspnea which was the basis for exclusion her from the study. One patient had an episode of psychomotor agitation during infusion of 10 ml of Cerebrolysin. At the same time, in the patient placebo group there was not only an analogous case of psychomotor agitation after the first and the second placebo infusions, but also a generalised convulsive attack on day 30 of stroke. Analysis of stroke outcome by day 30 did not revealed reliable differences between the groups in terms of mortality. Causes of death of 3 of 5 Cerebrolysin patients and one patient from the placebo group were not related to stroke (pulmonary embolism, pneumonia, pyelonephritis). 2 Cerebrolysin patients and 2 placebo patients died as a result of cerebral edema and development of secondary compression of the brainstem structures. STROKE, No. 11, 2004 CEREBROLYSIN IN ISCHEMIC STROKE TREATMENT During assessment of the level of functional recovery of impaired neurological functions, a tendency towards increase in the score by the Barthel Index was observed in both Cerebrolysin patient groups. Among patients of those groups, as of day 30 of the disease 3 patients demonstrated complete recovery of neurological functions (a variant of “minor” stroke, the NIH score = 0, the Barthel Index was above 75), while in the group that received placebo such cases were not observed. Table 1. Demographic and Initial Clinical Characteristics of Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients Enrolled in the Study Placebo (n=12) Index Sex: male 9 female 3 Average age, years 69.4±9.5 Correlation of number of patients with 8/4 affection of left and right hemispheres Time passed since stoke onset to admission to a 8.6±2.9 hospital, hours Average NIH score at the moment of 12.2±2.8 admission Average Rankin score at the moment of 3.8±0.9 admission Number of patients with NIH score 3 (25%) above 14 (severe stroke) Number of patients with NIH score equal 9 (75%) and below 14 (moderately severe stroke) Average brain lesion volume, cm3 21.7±23.1 Number of patients with brain lesion volume of 7 7 - 64 cm3 Cerebrolysin 10 ml/day (n=12) 50 ml/day (n=12) 3 9 69.9±10.2 6 6 68.7±10.6 6/6 . 8/4 7.0±2.4 9.2±2.9 12.3±6.6 11.2±4.7 4.2±0.9 3.5±1.1 5 (42%) 3 (25%) 7 (58%) 9 (75%) 14.6±18.3 17.5±14.7 6 8 Lesion volume, cm3 Placebo Cerebrolysin (10 and 50 ml) Day 3 Day 10 Dynamics of the Brain Lesion Volume According to MRI Data While analysing dynamics of a clinical score on NIH Scales and on the Modified Rankin Scale, no reliable difference between groups was revealed. At the same time, comparison of STROKE, No. 11, 2004 CEREBROLYSIN IN ISCHEMIC STROKE TREATMENT indices on the Clinical Global Impression Scale revealed acceleration of regression of neurological disorders in the 50 ml/day Cerebrolysin patient group on day 30 of the disease as compared with the placebo patient group (p<0.05). Assessment of regression dynamics of individual focal symptoms revealed reliable improvement of the movement function during 10 ml/day Cerebrolysin treatment by day 30 of that treatment (p<0.05), as well as a tendency towards more complete recovery of sensory functions in the group of patients who received 50 ml of Cerebrolysin (p=0.063) versus the placebo patient group. Assessment of dynamics of morphometric indices did not reveal significant differences between groups in terms of growth of the brain lesion volume in lacunar infarction patients and in extensive infarction patients (with the lesion volume above 70 cm3). At the same time, the majority of patients who received Cerebrolysin and had the lesion volume of 7 to 64 cm 3 demonstrated reliable slowing down of that volume’s growth on day 3 of the disease as compared with patients from the placebo group (р<0,05). On day 10 of the disease, a tendency towards decrease in the growth of the lesion volume was observed in Cerebrolysin patient groups (see Figure). Analysis of results of EEG-monitoring performed during an acute pharmacological test (see Table 2) proved that more than 60% of Cerebrolysin patients showed a tendency towards increase in intensity of the α-rhythm both in affected and intact hemispheres (only 25% of placebo patients showed that tendency; p<0.1). At that, more than 10% decrease in the hemispheric asymmetry ratio by the α-rhythm in 10 ml/day and 50 ml/day Cerebrolysin groups occurred respectively in 50 and 54.5% of patients (in 16.6% of placebo patients; p<0.1). Monitoring of bioelectrical brain activity revealed decrease in size and prevalence of θ- and δfoci, measured by MRI, in the brain infarct area projection in 72.7% of patients who received 50 ml Cerebrolysin, while in the placebo group positive developments were revealed only in 16.6% of cases (р<0.05). Administration of Cerebrolysin, including in the 50 ml dose, did not provoke any paroxysmal brain activity. Research of α-rhythm intensity dynamics revealed a tendency towards growth of that dynamics in both Cerebrolysin groups. However, in the 10 ml/day Cerebrolysin group increase in intensity prevailed in the intact hemisphere, while in the 50 ml/day Cerebrolysin group it happened in both hemispheres which was accompanied by decrease in the hemispheric asymmetry ratio in that group up to 30% by day 30 of stroke onset (p<0.1). Assessment of Cerebrolysin efficacy depending on time of therapy commencement (within 0 6 or 6 - 12 hours of stroke onset) revealed a tendency towards greater increase in the score on the Barthel Scale by day 30 in case of Cerebrolysin infusion within a 6-hour therapeutic window (38.8±11.3 points) versus the period of 6 to 12 hours (28±13.5 points; р<0.1). Table 2. EEG-Monitoring Results During Acute Pharmacological Test Index Placebo Increase in α-rhythm intensity (more than 10%) 3/12 (25%) STROKE, No. 11, 2004 Cerebrolysin 10 ml/day 50 ml/day 8/12 (66.6%) 7/11 (63.6%) CEREBROLYSIN IN ISCHEMIC STROKE TREATMENT Decrease in the hemispheric asymmetry ratio (more than 10%) Decrease in δ- and θ-foci, increase in αfocus Paroxysmal activity 2/12(16.6%) 6/12 (50%) 6/1 1 (54.5%) 2/12 (16.6%) 5/12 (41.7%) 8/1 1 (72.7%)* 0 0 0 During the correlation analysis it was determined that there was close connection between stroke initial severity (by the NIH Scale) at the moment of admission to a hospital and the brain lesion volume on day 1 of the disease in the placebo group and in the 10 ml/day Cerebrolysin group; also each of those indices and their changes were closely connected with dynamics of δ-, θand α-foci on the EEG on days 3, 10 and 30 of stroke onset. At the same time, the 50 ml/day Cerebrolysin group maintained only correlation between initial clinical and MRI-indices on day 1, while correlations with clinical indices dynamics, MRI- and electroencephalography data were absent. Disappearance of correlation of basic patient characteristics with dynamics of these characteristics during 50 ml/day Cerebrolysin treatment proves the effect of this medication on the natural disease history and the ability of this medication to increase recovery possibilities for morphological and functional processes. Thus, the conducted study has confirmed Cerebrolysin safety in 10 ml and 50 ml doses in treatment of ischemic stroke patients. It has been determined that this medication, especially in the dose of 50 ml, decreases growth of infarction focus and normalises the brain functional status. Early commencement of therapy (within the first 6 hours of the disease) favours more complete recovery of impaired neurological functions which permits to use Cerebrolysin within a therapeutic window under emergency conditions and in neuroreanimation units. Undoubtedly, it is worthwhile to continue this study enrolling more patients in it. LITERATURE 1. Gusev E.I., Skvortsova V.I. Cerebral ischemia. М: Medicine 2001. 2. Windisch M., Gschanes A., Hutter-Paier B. Neurotrophic activities and therapeutic experience with a brain-derived peptide preparation, ageing and dementia. J Neural Transmis 1998: Suppl 53. 3. Boado R.J. Molecular regulation of the blood-brain barrier GLUT1 glucose transporter by brainderived factor, ageing and dementia. J Neural Transmis 1998: Suppl 53 4. Gonzalez ME, Francis-Turner L. et at. Antioxidant systemic effect of short-term Cerebrolysin administration, ageing and dementia. J Neural Transmis 1998; Suppl 53. 5. Gusev E.I., Burd G.S., Gekht A.B. et al. Use of Cerebrolysin in neurological and psychological practice. Collected works. Clinical-neurophysiologic study of Cerebrolysin effect on the brain functional status in acute and early recovery periods of hemispheric ischemic stroke. М 1998;20—28. 6. STIPAS investigators. Stroke 1994 25: 418 - 423. Note. * - p<0.05 versus the placebo group. STROKE, No. 11, 2004