TESLA Trial: Rationale, Protocol, and Design

Author:

Zaidat Osama O.1ORCID,Kasab Sami Al2,Sheth Sunil3,Ortega‐Gutierrez Santiago4,Rai Ansaar T.5,Given Curtis A.6,Grandhi Ramesh7,Mokin Maxim8,Katz Jeffrey M.9,Maud Alberto10,Gupta Rishi11,Smith Wade S.12,Dippel Diederik W.13,Gress Daryl14,Nguyen Thanh N.15,Brown Scott16,Jadhav Ashutosh P.17,Eljovich Lucas18,Majoie Charles19,Patterson Mary S.1,Slight Hannah1,Below Kristine1,Yoo Albert J.20

Affiliation:

1. Neuroscience Institute Bon Secours Mercy Health St. Vincent Hospital Toledo OH

2. Medical University of South Carolina Charleston IA

3. UT Health McGovern Medical School Houston TX

4. University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics Iowa IA

5. Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute West Virginia University Morgantown WV

6. Baptist Healthy System Lexington KY

7. University of Utah Medical School Salt Lake City UT

8. University of South Florida Medical School Tampa FL

9. Northwell Medical Center Manhasset NY

10. Texas Tech University Health Science Center at El Paso El Paso TX

11. Well Star Health Atlanta GA

12. University of California San Francisco San Francisco CA

13. Erasmus University Medical Center The Randstad Rotterdam NA Netherlands

14. Nebraska Medical Center Omaha NE

15. Boston Medical Center Boston MA

16. Altair Biostatistics St. Louis Park MN

17. Barrow Neurological Institute Phoenix AZ

18. University of Tennessee Memphis TN

19. Amsterdam University Medical Center Amsterdam Netherlands

20. Texas Stroke Institute Dallas TX

Abstract

Background Mechanical thrombectomy has been shown to be effective in patients with acute ischemic stroke secondary to large‐vessel occlusion and small to moderate infarct volume. However, there are no randomized clinical trials for large‐core infarct volume comparing mechanical thrombectomy to medical therapy in the population selected based solely on noncontrast computed tomography brain scan. The TESLA (Thrombectomy for Emergent Salvage of Large Anterior Circulation Ischemic Stroke) randomized clinical trial is designed to address this clinical question. Methods The TESLA trial aim is to demonstrate the efficacy (3‐month and 1‐year disability following stroke) and safety of intraarterial mechanical thrombectomy in patients with large‐volume infarction assessed with a noncontrast computed tomography scan. The TESLA trial design is a prospective, randomized controlled, multicenter, open‐label, assessor‐blinded anterior circulation acute ischemic stroke trial with adaptive enrichment design, enrolling up to 300 patients. Patients with anterior circulation large‐vessel occlusion who meet the imaging and clinical eligibility criteria with a large‐core infarction on the basis of noncontrast computed tomography Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (2–5) adjudicated by a site investigator will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to undergo intraarterial thrombectomy or best medical management up to 24 hours from last known well. Results The primary efficacy outcome is utility‐weighted modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score distribution at 90 days between the groups. The results will be based on an intention‐to‐treat analysis that will examine the Bayesian posterior probability that, adjusted for Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score, patients with large‐core infarct volume treated with intra‐arterial thrombectomy have higher expected utility‐weighted mRS than those treated with best medical management alone. The primary safety outcome is the 90‐day death rate. Key secondary outcomes are dichotomized mRS 0 to 2 and 0 to 3 outcomes, ordinal mRS scores, and quality of life (EuroQol 5 Dimension 5 Level survey) at 90 days and 1 year, utility‐weighted mRS at 1 year, hemicraniectomy rate, and rate of 24‐hour symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage in both groups. Conclusion TESLA is a pragmatic trial, designed to address the unanswered question of the efficacy and safety of intra‐arterial thrombectomy in patients with large infarcts diagnosed by the site investigator only on noncontrast computed tomography scan secondary to anterior circulation large‐vessel occlusion up to 24 hours from stroke symptoms onset.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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