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Prehospital transdermal glyceryl trinitrate in patients with ultra-acute presumed stroke (RIGHT-2): effects on outcomes at day 365 in a randomised, sham-controlled, blinded, phase III, superiority ambulance-based trial

Title: Prehospital transdermal glyceryl trinitrate in patients with ultra-acute presumed stroke (RIGHT-2): effects on outcomes at day 365 in a randomised, sham-controlled, blinded, phase III, superiority ambulance-based trial
Authors: Lisa J Woodhouse; Jason P Appleton; Christine Roffe; Else C Sandset; Jeffrey L Saver; Niro Siriwardena; Nikola Sprigg; Joanna M Wardlaw; Philip M Bath; Sandeep Ankolekar; Timothy J England; Grant Mair; Keith Muir; Christopher I Price; Stuart Pocock; Marc Randall; Thompson G Robinson
Publication Year: 2023
Subject Terms: A300 - Clinical medicine; B700 - Nursing; B990 - Subjects allied to medicine not elsewhere classified; ambulance; Emergency Medical Services; intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH); ischaemic stroke; paramedic; prehospital; randomised controlled trial; stroke; transient ischaemic attack
Description: BackgroundThe Rapid Intervention with Glyceryl Trinitrate in Hypertensive Stroke Trial-2 (RIGHT-2) reported no overall treatment difference between glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) and sham at day 90. Here we assess participants’ outcomes 1?year after randomisation.MethodsRIGHT-2 was an ambulance-based prospective randomised controlled trial where patients with presumed stroke and systolic blood pressure (BP) of >120?mm Hg received either GTN (5?mg/day) or sham patch. Centralised blinded telephone follow-up was performed at days 90 (primary endpoint) and 365 (secondary endpoint). The lead outcome was dependency assessed with the modified Rankin Scale (mRS).Results1149 patients were recruited to RIGHT-2 between October 2015 and May 2018, and 1097 (95.5%) had outcome data recorded at day 365. At baseline, the patients were; female (48%), had a mean age of 73 (15) years, BP of 162 (25)/92 (18) mm Hg, onset to randomisation of 70 (45–115) min, diagnosis of ischaemic stroke (52%), intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) (13%), transient ischaemic attack (TIA) (9%) and mimics (26%). There was no effect of GTN on mRS score at day 365 in participants with confirmed stroke/TIA (adjusted common odds ratio (acOR) 1.10, 95%?CI 0.86 to 1.42) or in all patients. In patients randomised to GTN, mRS at day 365 tended to be worse in those with ICH (acOR 1.65, 95%?CI 0.84 to 3.25) and better in those with a mimic diagnosis (acOR 0.53, 95%?CI 0.33 to 0.84).ConclusionAt 1?year post randomisation, dependency did not differ between GTN and sham treatment in either the target population or overall. In prespecified subgroup analyses, GTN was associated with reduced dependency in participants with a final diagnosis of mimic and a non-significant worse outcome in participants with ICH.Trial registration number ISRCTN26986053.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: unknown
Relation: 10779/lincoln.24876753.v2
Availability: https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Prehospital_transdermal_glyceryl_trinitrate_in_patients_with_ultra-acute_presumed_stroke_RIGHT-2_effects_on_outcomes_at_day_365_in_a_randomised_sham-controlled_blinded_phase_III_superiority_ambulance-based_trial/24876753
Rights: CC BY 4.0
Accession Number: edsbas.9DC90387
Database: BASE