Zhao Zi-Ai, Lv Yan, Chen Hui-Sheng
Department of Neurology General Hospital of Northern Theatre Command Shenyang China.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2025 Mar 18;14(6):e038570. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.124.038570. Epub 2025 Feb 19.
As a noninvasive, low-cost, nonpharmacological procedure with excellent properties of safety, remote ischemic conditioning (RIC) has been demonstrated to prevent recurrence of stroke among patients with ischemic stroke of large artery atherosclerosis origin. We hypothesized that the benefit is attributed to the improvement of collaterals by chronic RIC in this population, and we aimed to explore the influence of chronic RIC on collateral status evaluated by digital subtraction angiography in this population.
The RICAS (Remote Ischemic Preconditioning on Collaterals of Atherosclerosis Stroke) study is a prospective, randomized, blind end point, multicenter study. Eligible patients with ischemic stroke of anterior circulation caused by large artery atherosclerosis, poor collateral compensation, and more than 1 month of symptom onset, are randomly assigned into experimental and control groups with a ratio of 1:1. The patients in the experiment group will receive treatment with RIC (bilateral upper limbs, for a total procedure time of 50 minutes, twice daily) for 1 year as an adjunct to guideline-based treatment, while patients in the control group only receive guideline-based treatment. A maximum of 300 patients (150 participants per group) are required to test the superiority hypothesis with 80% power (using a 2-sided =0.05) to detect a 15% difference. Subgroup analyses for the primary end point will be performed on 8 prespecified subgroups by age, sex, ischemic event (acute ischemic stroke ore transient ischemic stroke), tandem lesion, history of hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, and myocardial infarction. The primary outcome is the proportion of collateral status improvement, which is defined as an increase of ≥1 point on the American Society of Interventional and Therapeutic Neuroradiology/Society of Interventional Radiology score, as assessed by digital subtraction angiography at 12 months after randomization. The safety outcomes include RIC-related adverse events.
This study may provide the direct evidence for the potential effect of chronic RIC treatment on the improvement of collateral status.
URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT06170944.
作为一种无创、低成本的非药物治疗方法,远程缺血预处理(RIC)具有出色的安全性,已被证明可预防大动脉粥样硬化性缺血性卒中患者的卒中复发。我们假设这种益处归因于该人群中慢性RIC对侧支循环的改善,并且我们旨在探讨慢性RIC对通过数字减影血管造影评估的该人群侧支循环状态的影响。
RICAS(动脉粥样硬化性卒中侧支循环的远程缺血预处理)研究是一项前瞻性、随机、盲终点、多中心研究。符合条件的大动脉粥样硬化导致的前循环缺血性卒中患者,侧支循环代偿不良,且症状发作超过1个月,按1:1的比例随机分为实验组和对照组。实验组患者将接受RIC治疗(双侧上肢,每次总操作时间50分钟,每日两次)1年,作为基于指南治疗的辅助治疗,而对照组患者仅接受基于指南的治疗。需要最多300名患者(每组150名参与者)以80%的检验效能(双侧检验α=0.05)来检验优越性假设,以检测15%的差异。将对8个预先指定的亚组进行主要终点的亚组分析,这些亚组按年龄、性别、缺血事件(急性缺血性卒中或短暂性脑缺血发作)、串联病变、高血压病史、高胆固醇血症、糖尿病和心肌梗死进行划分。主要结局是侧支循环状态改善的比例,定义为随机分组后12个月通过数字减影血管造影评估的美国介入和治疗神经放射学会/介入放射学会评分增加≥1分。安全性结局包括与RIC相关的不良事件。
本研究可能为慢性RIC治疗对改善侧支循环状态的潜在作用提供直接证据。