Stenting vs. Aggressive Medical Management for Preventing Recurrent Stroke in Intracranial Stenosis (SAMMPRIS)
Ischemic Stroke

About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Ischemic Stroke focused on measuring ischemic stroke, intracranial stenting, vascular risk factor management
Eligibility Criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA
Transient ischemic attack (TIA) or non-severe stroke within 30 days of enrollment attributed to 70-99% stenosis of a major intracranial artery (carotid artery, MCA stem (M1), vertebral artery, or basilar artery)
• may be diagnosed byTranscranial Doppler (TCD), Magnetic Resonance Angiogram (MRA), or computed tomography angiography (CTA) to qualify for angiogram performed as part of the study protocol but must be confirmed by catheter angiography for enrollment in the trial
- Modified Rankin score of ≤ 3
- Target area of stenosis in an intracranial artery that has a normal diameter of 2.00 mm to 4.50 mm
- Target area of stenosis is less than or equal to 14 mm in length
Age ≥ 30 years and ≤ 80 years.
• Patients 30-49 years are required to meet at least one additional criteria (i-vi) provided in the table below to qualify for the study. This additional requirement is to increase the likelihood that the symptomatic intracranial stenosis in patients 30-49 years is atherosclerotic.
i. insulin dependent diabetes for at least 15 years ii. at least 2 of the following atherosclerotic risk factors: hypertension (BP > 140/90 or on antihypertensive therapy); dyslipidemia (LDL > 130 mg /dl or HDL < 40 mg/dl or fasting triglycerides > 150 mg/dl or on lipid lowering therapy); smoking; non-insulin dependent diabetes or insulin dependent diabetes of less than 15 years duration; family history of any of the following: myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass, coronary angioplasty or stenting, stroke, carotid endarterectomy or stenting, peripheral vascular surgery in parent or sibling who was < 55 years of age for men or < 65 for women at the time of the event ii. history of any of the following: myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass, coronary angioplasty or stenting, carotid endarterectomy or stenting, or peripheral vascular surgery for atherosclerotic disease iv. any stenosis of an extracranial carotid or vertebral artery, another intracranial artery, subclavian artery, coronary artery, iliac or femoral artery, other lower or upper extremity artery, mesenteric artery, or renal artery that was documented by non-invasive vascular imaging or catheter angiography and is considered atherosclerotic v. aortic arch atheroma documented by non-invasive vascular imaging or catheter angiography vi. any aortic aneurysm documented by non-invasive vascular imaging or catheter angiography that is considered atherosclerotic
- Negative pregnancy test in a female who has had any menses in the last 18 months
- Patient is willing and able to return for all follow-up visits required by the protocol
- Patient is available by phone
- Patient understands the purpose and requirements of the study, can make him/herself understood, and has provided informed consent
EXCLUSION CRITERIA
- Tandem extracranial or intracranial stenosis (70%-99%) or occlusion that is proximal or distal to the target intracranial lesion (NOTE: an exception is allowed if the occlusion involves a single vertebral artery proximal to a symptomatic basilar artery stenosis and the contralateral vertebral artery is supplying the basilar artery)
- Bilateral intracranial vertebral artery stenosis of 70%-99% and uncertainty about which artery is symptomatic (e.g. if patient has pontine, midbrain, or temporal - occipital symptoms)
- Stenting, angioplasty, or endarterectomy of an extracranial (carotid or vertebral artery) or intracranial artery within 30 days prior to expected enrollment date
- Previous treatment of target lesion with a stent, angioplasty, or other mechanical device, or plan to perform staged angioplasty followed by stenting of target lesion
- Plan to perform concomitant angioplasty or stenting of an extracranial vessel tandem to an intracranial stenosis
- Presence of intraluminal thrombus proximal to or at the target lesion
- Any aneurysm proximal to or distal to stenotic intracranial artery
- Intracranial tumor (except meningioma) or any intracranial vascular malformation
- CT or angiographic evidence of severe calcification at target lesion
- Thrombolytic therapy within 24 hours prior to enrollment
- Progressive neurological signs within 24 hours prior to enrollment
- Brain infarct within previous 30 days of enrollment that is of sufficient size (> 5 cms) to be at risk of hemorrhagic conversion during or after stenting
- Any hemorrhagic infarct within 14 days prior to enrollment
- Any hemorrhagic infarct within 15 - 30 days that is associated with mass effect
- Any history of a primary intracerebral (parenchymal) hemorrhage (ICH)
- Any other intracranial hemorrhage (subarachnoid, subdural, epidural) within 30 days
- Any untreated chronic subdural hematoma of greater than 5 mm in thickness
- Intracranial arterial stenosis due to arterial dissection, Moya Moya disease; any known vasculitic disease; herpes zoster, varicella zoster or other viral vasculopathy; neurosyphilis; any other intracranial infection; any intracranial stenosis associated with Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis; radiation induced vasculopathy; fibromuscular dysplasia; sickle cell disease; neurofibromatosis; benign angiopathy of central nervous system; post-partum angiopathy; suspected vasospastic process, suspected recanalized embolus
- Presence of any of the following unequivocal cardiac sources of embolism: chronic or paroxysmal atrial fibrillation, mitral stenosis, mechanical valve, endocarditis, intracardiac clot or vegetation, myocardial infarction within three months, dilated cardiomyopathy, left atrial spontaneous echo contrast, ejection fraction less than 30%
- Known allergy or contraindication to aspirin, clopidogrel, heparin, nitinol, local or general anesthesia
- History of life-threatening allergy to contrast dye. If not life threatening and can be effectively pretreated, patient can be enrolled at physician's discretion
- Active peptic ulcer disease, major systemic hemorrhage within 30 days, active bleeding diathesis, platelets < 100,000, hematocrit < 30, International normalized ratio (INR) > 1.5, clotting factor abnormality that increases the risk of bleeding, current alcohol or substance abuse, uncontrolled severe hypertension (systolic pressure > 180 mm Hg or diastolic pressure > 115 mm Hg), severe liver impairment Aspartate Transaminase (AST) or Alanine transaminase (ALT) > 3 x normal, cirrhosis, creatinine > 3.0 (unless on dialysis)
- Major surgery (including open femoral, aortic, or carotid surgery) within previous 30 days or planned in the next 90 days after enrollment
- Indication for warfarin or heparin beyond enrollment (NOTE: exceptions allowed for use of systemic heparin during stenting procedure or subcutaneous heparin for deep vein thrombosis (DVT) prophylaxis while hospitalized)
- Severe neurological deficit that renders the patient incapable of living independently
- Dementia or psychiatric problem that prevents the patient from following an outpatient program reliably
- Co-morbid conditions that may limit survival to less than 3 years
- Pregnancy or of childbearing potential and unwilling to use contraception for the duration of this study
- Enrollment in another study that would conflict with the current study
Sites / Locations
- UAB Medical Center
- Barrow Neurological Institute - St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center
- Mayo
- Glendale Adventist
- Cedars Sinai
- UCLA
- UCSF
- Washington Hospital
- University of Florida - Shands
- University of Miami
- Florida Hospital
- Emory University
- Rush University Medical Center
- Central DuPage Hospital
- Johns Hopkins
- Massachusetts General Hospital
- Wayne State
- Henry Ford Medical Center
- Providence St. John
- University of Mississippi
- University of Buffalo
- NYU Medical Center
- Columbia University Medical Center
- Cornell Medical College
- Stony Brook University Medical Center
- Carolinas Medical Center
- Duke University Medical Center
- Moses Cone Medical Center
- Forsyth Medical Center
- University of Cincinnati
- University Hospitals Case Medical Center
- Cleveland Clinic
- Riverside Methodist
- Oregon Health Sciences University
- University of Pennsylvania
- Thomas Jefferson University
- University of Pittsburgh
- Medical University of South Carolina
- Erlanger Medical Center
- Baylor University Medical Center
- UT Southwestern
- Baylor St. Luke's
- Methodist Hospital
- Scott & White - Texas A&M
- Inova Fairfax Hospital
- Sentera
- Sacred Heart Medical Center
- MultiCare
- West Virginia University
- Medical College of Wisconsin
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
intensive medical management plus stenting
intensive medical management alone
intracranial angioplasty and stenting using the Gateway balloon and Wingspan self-expanding nitinol stent (or any future FDA approved iterations of the balloon, stent, or the delivery systems) plus intensive medical therapy (aspirin 325 mg / day for entire follow-up, clopidogrel 75mg per day for 90 days after enrollment unless cardiologist recommends continuing clopidogrel beyond 90 days for a cardiac indication, and aggressive risk factor management primarily targeting blood pressure < 140 / 90 mm Hg (< 130 / 80 if diabetic) and LDL < 70 mg / dl).
Intensive medical therapy alone (aspirin 325 mg / day for entire follow-up, clopidogrel 75mg per day for 90 days after enrollment unless cardiologist recommends continuing clopidogrel beyond 90 days for a cardiac indication, and aggressive risk factor management primarily targeting blood pressure < 140 / 90 mm Hg (< 130 / 80 if diabetic) and LDL < 70 mg / dl)