A new era for stroke therapy: Integrating neurovascular protection with optimal reperfusion

Author:

Shi Ligen12,Rocha Marcelo3,Leak Rehana K4,Zhao Jingyan1,Bhatia Tarun N4,Mu Hongfeng1,Wei Zhishuo1,Yu Fang1,Weiner Susan L4,Ma Feifei1ORCID,Jovin Tudor G3,Chen Jun15

Affiliation:

1. Pittsburgh Institute of Brain Disorders & Recovery and Department of Neurology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Zhejiang, China

3. Department of Neurology, UPMC Stroke Institute, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

4. Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

5. Geriatric Research, Educational and Clinical Center, Veterans Affairs Pittsburgh Health Care System, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

Abstract

Recent advances in stroke reperfusion therapies have led to remarkable improvement in clinical outcomes, but many patients remain severely disabled, due in part to the lack of effective neuroprotective strategies. In this review, we show that 95% of published preclinical studies on “neuroprotectants” (1990–2018) reported positive outcomes in animal models of ischemic stroke, while none translated to successful Phase III trials. There are many complex reasons for this failure in translational research, including that the majority of clinical trials did not test early delivery of neuroprotectants in combination with successful reperfusion. In contrast to the clinical trials, >80% of recent preclinical studies examined the neuroprotectant in animal models of transient ischemia with complete reperfusion. Furthermore, only a small fraction of preclinical studies included long-term functional assessments, aged animals of both genders, and models with stroke comorbidities. Recent clinical trials demonstrate that 70%–80% of patients treated with endovascular thrombectomy achieve successful reperfusion. These successes revive the opportunity to retest previously failed approaches, including cocktail drugs that target multiple injury phases and different cell types. It is our hope that neurovascular protectants can be retested in future stroke research studies with specific criteria outlined in this review to increase translational successes.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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