Author:
Zhao Yang,Cui Wanzhen,Xie Tingting,Zhao Kai,Li Yunke,Wan Yingfeng,Wang Xia,Li Qiang,Xiaoying Chen,Liu Zhenchuan,Zhao Haining,Gong Baoying,Wang Ruihua,Wu Manli,Wang Dou,Zheng Yanwen,Chen Yanjia,Chen Yue,Guo Qihua,Gan Changlian,Che Fengyuan,Song Lili,Anderson Craig S.,Guo Jianwen,
Abstract
Introduction: The popular traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) compound FYTF-919 (Zhong Feng Xing Nao prescription) may improve outcome from acute intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) through effects on brain edema, hematoma absorption, and the immune system. This study is to assess whether FYTF-919 is safe and effective as compared to matching placebo treatment in patients with acute ICH. Methods: The ongoing Chinese Herbal medicine in patients with Acute INtracerebral hemorrhage (CHAIN) is a multicenter, prospective, randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled trial of FYTF-919 in patients with acute ICH at 20–30 hospital sites in China. Eligible ICH patients presenting within 48 h after symptom onset are randomly allocated to receive either FYTF-919 (100 mL per day × 28 d, oral) or matching placebo. A sample size of 1,504 patients is estimated to provide 90% power (α 0.05) to detect a ≥20% improvement in average utility-weight scores on the modified Rankin scale (UW-mRS) assessed at 90 days, with 6% non-adherence and 10% lost to follow-up. The primary efficacy outcome is UW-mRS at 90 days. Secondary outcomes include binary measures of the mRS, neurological impairment on the National Institute of Health Stroke Scale, and health-related quality of life on the EuroQol EQ-5D-5L scale at different time points over 6 months of follow-up. The key safety measure is serious adverse events. Conclusion: CHAIN is on schedule to provide reliable evidence over the benefits of a popular herbal TCM for the treatment of acute ICH.
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Cited by
1 articles.
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