Recombinant Human Erythropoietin in the Treatment of Acute Ischemic Stroke

Hannelore Ehrenreich(University of Göttingen), Karin Weißenborn(Williams & Associates), Hilmar Prange(University of Göttingen), Dietmar Schneider(University of Göttingen), Christian Weimar(University of Göttingen), Katja E. Wartenberg(University of Göttingen), Peter D. Schellinger(University of Göttingen), Matthias Bohn(University of Göttingen), Harald Becker(University of Göttingen), Martin Wegrzyn(University of Göttingen), Peter Jähnig(PAREXEL International (United Kingdom)), Manfred Herrmann(University of Göttingen), Michael Knauth(University of Göttingen), Mathias Bähr(University of Göttingen), Wolfgang Heide(University of Göttingen), A. P. Wagner(University of Göttingen), Stefan Schwab(University of Göttingen), Heinz Reichmann(University of Göttingen), G. Schwendemann(Klinikum Bremen-Mitte), Reinhard Dengler(University of Göttingen), Andreas Kastrup(University of Göttingen), Claudia Bartels(University of Göttingen)
Stroke
October 15, 2009
Cited by 596Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Numerous preclinical findings and a clinical pilot study suggest that recombinant human erythropoietin (EPO) provides neuroprotection that may be beneficial for the treatment of patients with ischemic stroke. Although EPO has been considered to be a safe and well-tolerated drug over 2 decades, recent studies have identified increased thromboembolic complications and/or mortality risks on EPO administration to patients with cancer or chronic kidney disease. Accordingly, the double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized German Multicenter EPO Stroke Trial (Phase II/III; ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00604630) was designed to evaluate efficacy and safety of EPO in stroke. METHODS: This clinical trial enrolled 522 patients with acute ischemic stroke in the middle cerebral artery territory (intent-to-treat population) with 460 patients treated as planned (per-protocol population). Within 6 hours of symptom onset, at 24 and 48 hours, EPO was infused intravenously (40,000 IU each). Systemic thrombolysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator was allowed and stratified for. RESULTS: Unexpectedly, a very high number of patients received recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (63.4%). On analysis of total intent-to-treat and per-protocol populations, neither primary outcome Barthel Index on Day 90 (P=0.45) nor any of the other outcome parameters showed favorable effects of EPO. There was an overall death rate of 16.4% (n=42 of 256) in the EPO and 9.0% (n=24 of 266) in the placebo group (OR, 1.98; 95% CI, 1.16 to 3.38; P=0.01) without any particular mechanism of death unexpected after stroke. CONCLUSIONS: Based on analysis of total intent-to-treat and per-protocol populations only, this is a negative trial that also raises safety concerns, particularly in patients receiving systemic thrombolysis.


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