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Time Course of Early Hematoma Expansion in Acute Spot-Sign Positive Intracerebral Hemorrhage: Prespecified Analysis of the SPOTLIGHT Randomized Clinical Trial

  • Fahad S. Al-Ajlan*
  • , David J. Gladstone
  • , Dongbeom Song
  • , Kevin E. Thorpe
  • , Rick H. Swartz
  • , Kenneth S. Butcher
  • , Martin Del Campo
  • , Dar Dowlatshahi
  • , Henrik Gensicke
  • , Gloria Jooyoung Lee
  • , Matthew L. Flaherty
  • , Michael D. Hill
  • , Richard I. Aviv
  • , Andrew M. Demchuk
  • , David J. Gladstone
  • , Karl Boyle
  • , Maria Braganza
  • , Nadia Fedasko
  • , Dolores Golob
  • , Edith Bardi
  • Samantha Senyshyn, Megan Cayley, Connie Colavecchia, Shelagh Coutts, Gary Klein, Bijoy Menon, Tim Watson, Eric Smith, Suresh Subramaniam, Simerpreet Bal, Philip Barber, Marie Christine Camden, Myles Horton, Sachin Mishra, Vivek Nambiar, Andres Venegas Torres, Sweta Adatia, Amjad Alseraya, Jamsheed Desai, Jennifer Mandzia, Michel Shamy, Anurag Trivedi, Philip Choi, Veronique Dubuc, Evgenia Klourfeld, Thalia Field, Dilip Singh, Tapuwa Musuka, Sarah Bloujney, Davar Nikneshan, Oje Imoukhuede, Amy Yu, Ramana Appireddy, Jamie Evans, Karla Ryckborst, Carly Calvert, Dariush Dowlatshahi, Grant Stotts, Mukul Sharma, Sohail Robert, Melodie Mortensen, Rany Shamloul, Martin Del Campo, Frank L. Silver, Leanne Casaubon, Cheryl Jaigobin, Yael Perez, Libby Kalman, Jemini Abraham, Relu Wiegner, Anne Cayley, Victoria Riediger, Ken Butcher, Mahesh Kate, Thomas Jeerakathil, Ashfaq Shuaib, Sylvia Gaucher, Leka Sivakumar, Samuel Yip, Philip Teal, Andrew Woolfenden, Oscar Benavente, Jeff Beckman, Colleen Murphy, Thalia Field, Negar Asdaghi, Karina Villaluna-Murrvay, Demetrios J. Sahlas, Almunder Algird, Jordan Knapman, Sue Macmillan, Janice Sancan, Manu Mehdiratta, Yael Perez, Verity John, Al Noor Dhanani, Bryan Temple, Andre Douen, Daniel Selchen, Gustavo Saposnik, Pawel Kostyrko, Richard Chan, Bryan Young, Balagopal Kumar, Peter Soros, Kimberley Hesser, Mary Wright, Connie Frank, Belinda Amato-Marziali, Yan Deschaintre, Alexandre Poppe, Marlene Lapierre, Jean Martin Boulanger, Leo Berger, Lise Blais, Christel Simard, Jeanne Teitelbaum, Natasha Campbell, Al Jin, Adriana Breen, Suzanne Bickford
*Corresponding author for this work
  • Alfaisal University
  • University of Toronto
  • University of Calgary
  • University of New South Wales
  • University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine
  • University of Ottawa
  • University of Basel
  • University of Cincinnati

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: In the SPOTLIGHT trial (Spot Sign Selection of Intracerebral Hemorrhage to Guide Hemostatic Therapy), patients with a computed tomography (CT) angiography spot-sign positive acute intracerebral hemorrhage were randomized to rFVIIa (recombinant activated factor VIIa; 80 μg/kg) or placebo within 6 hours of onset, aiming to limit hematoma expansion. Administration of rFVIIa did not significantly reduce hematoma expansion. In this prespecified analysis, we aimed to investigate the impact of delays from baseline imaging to study drug administration on hematoma expansion. Methods: Hematoma volumes were measured on the baseline CT, early post-dose CT, and 24 hours CT scans. Total hematoma volume (intracerebral hemorrhage+intraventricular hemorrhage) change between the 3 scans was calculated as an estimate of how much hematoma expansion occurred before and after studying drug administration. Results: Of the 50 patients included in the trial, 44 had an early post-dose CT scan. Median time (interquartile range) from onset to baseline CT was 1.4 hours (1.2-2.6). Median time from baseline CT to study drug was 62.5 (55-80) minutes, and from study drug to early post-dose CT was 19 (14.5-30) minutes. Median (interquartile range) total hematoma volume increased from baseline CT to early post-dose CT by 10.0 mL (-0.7 to 18.5) in the rFVIIa arm and 5.4 mL (1.8-8.3) in the placebo arm (P=0.96). Median volume change between the early post-dose CT and follow-up scan was 0.6 mL (-2.6 to 8.3) in the rFVIIa arm and 0.7 mL (-1.6 to 2.1) in the placebo arm (P=0.98). Total hematoma volume decreased between the early post-dose CT and 24-hour scan in 44.2% of cases (rFVIIa 38.9% and placebo 48%). The adjusted hematoma growth in volume immediately post dose for FVIIa was 0.998 times that of placebo ([95% CI, 0.71-1.43]; P=0.99). The hourly growth in FFVIIa was 0.998 times that for placebo ([95% CI, 0.994-1.003]; P=0.50; Table 3). Conclusions: In the SPOTLIGHT trial, the adjusted hematoma volume growth was not associated with Factor VIIa treatment. Most hematoma expansion occurred between the baseline CT and the early post-dose CT, limiting any potential treatment effect of hemostatic therapy. Future hemostatic trials must treat intracerebral hemorrhage patients earlier from onset, with minimal delay between baseline CT and drug administration. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT01359202.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)715-721
Number of pages7
JournalStroke
Volume54
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • activated factor VII
  • hematoma expansion
  • intracerebral hemorrhage
  • rFVIIa
  • stroke
  • tranexamic acid

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