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The Membrane-Activated Chelator Stroke Intervention (MACSI) Trial of DP-b99 in acute ischemic stroke: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multinational pivotal Phase III study
Rationale Zinc is both a direct neurotoxin and a signaling mediator in multiple early and late detrimental processes following ischemia. DP-b99, a lipophilic moderate-affinity chelator of zinc, is a first-in-class multitargeted neuroprotective agent for ischemic stroke. DP-b99 has completed several Phase I studies and two double-blind placebo-controlled Phase II trials, which supported the safety of DP-b99 and were consistent with a beneficial effect on poststroke recuperation.
Aim: Membrane-Activated Chelator Stroke Intervention is a Phase III study. The primary objective is to evaluate the safety and therapeutic effects of intravenous 1.0 mg/kg/day DP-b99, initiated within nine-hours of stroke onset in patients with moderately severe hemispheric acute ischemic stroke, through the analysis across the whole distribution of scores of the primary efficacy endpoint of the modified Rankin Scale, 90 days after the stroke.
Methods The Membrane-Activated Chelator Stroke Intervention study is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter, multinational, parallel-arm trial comparing a placebo group to a group treated with intravenous DP-b99 for four consecutive days. Non-rtPA-treated acute ischemic stroke patients - with a baseline NIHSS score of 10-16 and a clinical syndrome that includes language dysfunction, visual field defect and/or neglect - will be stratified on a 1 : 1 basis to one of the two treatments. Half will be randomized within 0-4.5 h of stroke onset. Follow-up after the four treatment days will occur on days 12, 30 and 90. An interim futility analysis will be performed after primary endpoint data have been collected for 50% of 770 subjects planned to be enrolled. A data and safety monitoring board will assess safety data and will oversee the interim analysis.
Conclusion This Phase III Membrane-Activated Chelator Stroke Intervention trial is based on promising data derived from previous Phase I and II DP-b99 trials and capitalizes on lessons learned from failures of past stroke studies in relation to neuroprotection, patient selection and data analysis
Results of Membrane-activated Chelator Stroke Intervention Randomized Trial of DP-b99 in Acute Ischemic Stroke
Background and Purpose-DP-b99, a lipophilic moderate-affinity chelator of zinc, was postulated to improve recovery after acute ischemic stroke. We evaluated the safety and therapeutic effects of DP-b99 in patients with acute hemispheric ischemic stroke. Methods-The Membrane-Activated Chelator Stroke Intervention trial was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter, parallel-group trial of intravenous DP-b99 administered for 4 consecutive days (NCT00893867). Acute ischemic stroke patients within 9 hours of onset, but untreated by alteplase, with a baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score of 10 to 16, and evidence of language dysfunction, visual field defect, and neglect were eligible. The primary efficacy analysis compared distributions of functional status measured by modified Rankin score in the intentto- treat population of patients with any post-treatment outcome, adjusted for initial severity. Functional and neurological recovery were secondary measures. Home time was an exploratory end point. Results-Enrollment terminated at n=446 after the planned interim analysis determined futility; follow-up continued. Final modified Rankin score distributions were equal between DP-b99 and placebo-treated groups (P=0.10; Padj adjusted for baseline age and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale=0.21). Fewer patients recovered to modified Rankin score 641 in the DP-b99-treated group (45/218; 20.6%) than after placebo (63/219; 28.8%) (P=0.05; P adj=0.10). Similarly, fewer patients attained National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale 641 after DP-b99 (42/218; 19.3%) than placebo (56/219; 25.6%; P=0.10; Padj=0.26). Mortality was similar between DP-b99 and placebo intent-to-treat groups (36/218; 16.5% vs 33/219; 15.1%; P=0.68). Home time was unchanged by treatment (median 36 vs 36.5 days; P=0.25). Conclusions-Despite encouraging preclinical and phase II trial data, DP-b99 shows no evidence of efficacy in treating human ischemic stroke