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Tenecteplase versus standard of care for minor ischaemic stroke with proven occlusion (TEMPO-2): a randomised, open label, phase 3 superiority trial

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posted on 2025-05-09, 03:51 authored by Shelagh B. Coutts, Sandeep Ankolekar, Ramana Appireddy, Juan F. Arenillas, Zarina Assis, Peter Bailey, Philip A. Barber, Rodrigo Bazan, Brian H. Buck, Ken S. Butcher, Marie-Christine Camden, Bruce C. V. Campbell, Leanne K. Casaubon, Luciana Catanese, Kausik Chatterjee, Philip M. C. Choi, Brian Clarke, Dar Dowlatshahi, Julia Ferrari, Thalia S. Field, Neil SprattNeil Spratt, Aravind Ganesh, D Ghia, M Goyal, S Greisenegger, O Halse, M Horn, G Hunter, O Imoukhuede, PJ Kelly, J Kennedy, C Kenney, TJ Kleinig, K Krishnan, F Lima, JL Mandzia, M Marko, SO Martins, G Medvedev, BK Menon, SM Mishra, C Molina, A Moussaddy, KW Muir, Mark ParsonsMark Parsons, AMW Penn, A Pille, OM Pontes-Neto, C Roffe, J Serena, R Simister, N Singh, D Strbian, CH Tham, MI Wiggam, DJ Williams, MR Willmot, T Wu, AYX Yu, G Zachariah, A Zafar, C Zerna, MD Hill, M Salluzzi, N Blenkin, A Dueck, C Doram, Q Zhang, K Ryckborst, S Bohn, Q Collier, F Taylor, BC Lethebe, A Jambula, K Sage, L Toussaint, S Save, J Lee, N Laham, AA Sultan, A Deepak, A Sitaram, AM Demchuk, A Lockey, A Micielli, A Wadhwa, B Arabambi, B Graham, C Bogiatzi, D Doshi, D Chakraborty, D Kim, D Vasquez, D Singh, D Tse, E Harrison, EE Smith, E Teleg, E Klourfeld, G Klein
Background: Individuals with minor ischaemic stroke and intracranial occlusion are at increased risk of poor outcomes. Intravenous thrombolysis with tenecteplase might improve outcomes in this population. We aimed to test the superiority of intravenous tenecteplase over non-thrombolytic standard of care in patients with minor ischaemic stroke and intracranial occlusion or focal perfusion abnormality. Methods: In this multicentre, prospective, parallel group, open label with blinded outcome assessment, randomised controlled trial, adult patients (aged ≥18 years) were included at 48 hospitals in Australia, Austria, Brazil, Canada, Finland, Ireland, New Zealand, Singapore, Spain, and the UK. Eligible patients with minor acute ischaemic stroke (National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score 0–5) and intracranial occlusion or focal perfusion abnormality were enrolled within 12 h from stroke onset. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1), using a minimal sufficient balance algorithm to intravenous tenecteplase (0·25 mg/kg) or non-thrombolytic standard of care (control). Primary outcome was a return to baseline functioning on pre-morbid modified Rankin Scale score in the intention-to-treat (ITT) population (all patients randomly assigned to a treatment group and who did not withdraw consent to participate) assessed at 90 days. Safety outcomes were reported in the ITT population and included symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage and death. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02398656, and is closed to accrual. Findings: The trial was stopped early for futility. Between April 27, 2015, and Jan 19, 2024, 886 patients were enrolled; 369 (42%) were female and 517 (58%) were male. 454 (51%) were assigned to control and 432 (49%) to intravenous tenecteplase. The primary outcome occurred in 338 (75%) of 452 patients in the control group and 309 (72%) of 432 in the tenecteplase group (risk ratio [RR] 0·96, 95% CI 0·88–1·04, p=0·29). More patients died in the tenecteplase group (20 deaths [5%]) than in the control group (five deaths [1%]; adjusted hazard ratio 3·8; 95% CI 1·4–10·2, p=0·0085). There were eight (2%) symptomatic intracranial haemorrhages in the tenecteplase group versus two (<1%) in the control group (RR 4·2; 95% CI 0·9–19·7, p=0·059). Interpretation: There was no benefit and possible harm from treatment with intravenous tenecteplase. Patients with minor stroke and intracranial occlusion should not be routinely treated with intravenous thrombolysis.

History

Journal title

Lancet

Volume

403

Issue

10444

Pagination

2597-2605

Publisher

The Lancet Publishing Group

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing

School

School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy

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