Prompt treatment with tranexamic acid may reduce intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) growth in patients with ongoing bleeding, though the timing of treatment appears to be key to improved outcomes, according to a study presented at ISC 2020.
The phase II STOP-AUST* trial involved 100 patients with ICH who exhibited a spot sign – a marker of ongoing bleeding – on computed tomography (CT) angiography. They were randomized 1:1 to receive either intravenous tranexamic acid (1 g over 10 minutes followed by 1 g over 8 hours; median age 72.5 years, 30 percent female) or placebo (median age 71 years, 46 percent female) within 4.5 hours of ICH onset (median time to treatment 150.5 minutes). Median NIHSS** at baseline was 14 and 12 in the tranexamic acid and placebo groups, respectively, while median ICH volume was 13.8 and 15.6 mL, respectively.
ICH growth – defined as a >33 percent or >6 mL increase from baseline in 24 hours after adjustment for baseline ICH volume – occurred in 44 and 52 percent of patients who received tranexamic acid and placebo, respectively (adjusted odds ratio [adjOR], 0.72, 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 0.32–1.59; p=0.41). [ISC 2020, abstract LB20]
Absolute haematoma growth was numerically, but not significantly, reduced in tranexamic acid vs placebo recipients (median 1.9 vs 3.4 mL; adjusted median difference -1.8 mL, 95 percent CI, -5.2 to 1.5 mL; p=0.28).
“[Tranexamic acid] treatment led to a non-statistically significant reduction in ICH growth, both in binary and absolute terms,” said study author Dr Nawaf Yassi from the University of Melbourne in Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Subgroup analyses noted a trend toward reduced haematoma growth among the 66 patients who received treatment ≤3 hours of ICH onset (adjOR, 0.41, 95 percent CI, 0.15–1.12), but not among those who received treatment 3–4.5 hours after onset (adjOR, 2.45, 95 percent CI, 0.52–11.57; pinteraction=0.06).
Post hoc analyses suggested that the best outcomes were derived when patients received tranexamic acid ≤2 hours from ICH onset (OR, 0.19, 95 percent CI, 0.03–1.15; p=0.07), with the risk reduction less apparent when treatment was administered at <3 hours (OR, 0.41) and <4 hours (OR, 0.64) from onset.
“Further trials using tranexamic acid are ongoing and focusing on ultra-early treatment – within 2 hours. This is where the greatest opportunity for intervention appears to be,” said Yassi.
There was no difference between tranexamic acid and placebo recipients in terms of major thromboembolic events (n=1 and 2, respectively; OR, 0.49; p=0.57), though there was a nonsignificant higher mortality rate in the tranexamic acid group (n=13 vs 8; adjOR, 2.38; p=0.19).
“I think a big reason for these kinds of results in the setting of haemorrhage is that, very quickly after the haemorrhage begins and the haematoma expands a bit, a lot of damage may already have occurred. And so even if we stop the bleeding later, much of the injury has occurred, and it may just be a bit too late. But the proof of principle is there,” said Professor Mitchell Elkind from Columbia University, New York City, New York, US, and president-elect of the American Heart Association, who was not affiliated with the study.
“[I]n a sense [this is] a very exciting result because it suggests that we may be able to have an impact, although from a practical level, it means we have to get to those patients super early, perhaps even earlier than we’re accustomed to doing for ischaemic stroke patients. And that I think is [going to] be the big challenge with a lot of these therapies,” he added.