Antibiotics Against Amyloid Angiopathy
Cerebral Amyloid AngiopathyWe will perform a randomized clinical trial with minocycline. Minocycline is an antibiotic of the tetracycline family and known to modulate inflammation, gelatinase activity and angiogenesis, which we know are central mechanisms in CAA-pathology. Our aim is to prove in a randomized clinical trial in a translational setting that minocycline treatment (duration 3 months) can decrease markers of neuroinflammation and the gelatinase pathway in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of persons with D-CAA (n=30) and sporadic-CAA (n=30).
Safety and Efficacy of Remote Ischemic Conditioning on Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy. (RIC-CAA)
Cerebral Amyloid AngiopathyCerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a common form of cerebral small vessel disease, characterized by symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage and cognitive impairment. However, no effective prevention and treatment strategies have been established. This study aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of remote ischemic conditioning on patients with CAA.
Coach Pilot Study: Assessing Cognitive Function and Related Small Vessel Disease Markers After Intracerebral...
Cerebral Amyloid AngiopathyIntracerebral Hemorrhage3 moreThe overall aim of this pilot study is to investigate the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) markers after cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA)-related and hypertensive arteriopathy (HA)-related intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) in relation to cognitive decline. The results from this pilot trial will be used to design a larger cohort study to investigate underlying mechanisms of cognitive decline after ICH. The study population consists of 32 patients; 16 patients with CAA-related ICH and 16 patients with HA-related ICH who are 55 years or older. Data will be collected at four measuring points: at baseline (during hospital admission for the ICH or at the outpatients clinic within one month of presentation with an acute ICH), after three months, after six months and after 12 months. Premorbid cognitive functioning will be assessed with the Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE) to select participants without pre-existing cognitive impairment.
SEarchiNg biomarkErs Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy (SENECA)
Cerebral Amyloid AngiopathyCerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is one of the major types of cerebral small vessel disease, and a leading cause of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage and cognitive decline in elderly patients. Although increasingly detected, a number of aspects including the pathophysiology, the clinical and neuroradiological phenotype and the disease course are still under investigation. The incomplete knowledge of the disease limits the implementation of evidence based guidelines on patient's clinical management and the development of treatments able to prevent or reduce disease progression. The SENECA (SEarchiNg biomarkErs of Cerebral Angiopathy) project is the first Italian multicentre cohort study aimed at better defining the disease natural history and identifying clinical and neuroradiological markers of disease progression. By a multidisciplinary approach and the collection of a large and well phenotyped series and biorepository of CAA patients, the study is ultimately expected to improve the diagnosis and the knowledge of CAA pathophysiological mechanisms.
MRI-markers to Monitor Small Vessel Disease Dynamics in the Prognosis of Small Vessel Disease-associated,...
Intracerebral HemorrhageCAA - Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy1 moreThis is a nested cohort study in the PRO-SVD cohort. Small vessel disease is a chronic disease and is thought to progress over time. MRI is the gold standard to diagnose small vessel disease, but data on MRI-visible disease progression are scarce. Complications of small vessel disease as well as location pattern, distribution and severity of these MRI small vessel disease markers differ according to the underlying phenotype. The primary aim of this project is to investigate individual small vessel disease burden progression detected by MRI in survivors or intracerebral hemorrhage.
Study of AMDX-2011P in Subjects With CAA
Cerebral Amyloid AngiopathyThe purpose of this research study is to assess safety and tolerability of a single intravenous (given through a vein) dose of the investigational retinal tracer AMDX-2011P in patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA).
Periventricular White Matter Hyperintensities in Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy and Hypertensive Arteriopathy...
Cerebral Amyloid AngiopathyHypertensive ArteriopathyWhite matter hyperintensities (WMH) are one of the small vessel disease-related MRI characteristics of both cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) and hypertensive arteriopathy (HA). WMH tend to show a peri-basal ganglia pattern in HA, whereas a multiple subcortical spots pattern can be observed in CAA. Periventricular WMH (PVWMH) have been reported to be posterior predominant using a semiautomated segmentation method and logarithmic transformation, not used in daily clinical practice. In these studies including CAA patients, patients initially presented with haemorrhage-related symptoms. In another study analysing PVWMH and cerebral amyloid evidence in patients with mild cognitive impairment, frontal PVWMH burden was associated with high uptake on florbetapir-PET whereas parietal and occipital PVWMH burden was associated with low CSF-amyloid-beta. The aim of this study is the descriptive comparative analysis of the distribution of PVWMH between CAA and HA patients with radiological tools available in daily practice.
Brain Hemorrhage and Functional Outcome in Stroke Patients With CAA Features on Pre-thrombolysis...
HemorrhageCerebral Amyloid Angiopathy1 moreBackground: In stroke patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis (IVT), presence and high number of strictly lobar cerebral microbleeds (compatible with cerebral amyloid angiopathy, CAA) seems to be associated with increased risk of hemorrhagic transformation, symptomatic hemorrhagic transformation, remote hemorrhage, and poor functional outcome. Some of these reported CAA patients with cerebral microbleeds also had chronic lobar intracerebral haemorrhage. Few data is available on IVT-treated CAA patients showing cortical superficial siderosis. There are no reports studying factors associated with brain hemorrhagic complication or functional outcome inside a group of IVT-treated CAA patients. Our aim was to evaluate brain hemorrhagic complications on 24h-CT and functional outcome after IVT in stroke patients with CAA features on pre-IVT MRI. Methods: In our stroke center, IVT decision in patients with CAA MRI features is left at the discretion of the treating physician. We retrospectively screened pre-IVT imaging of 959 consecutive IVT-treated stroke patients (between January 2015 and July 2022) without ongoing anticoagulation therapy for probable CAA MRI features defined by modified Boston criteria. After exclusion of 119 patients with lacking MRI (n=47), with MRI showing motion artefacts (n=49) or with alternative chronic brain hemorrhage cause on MRI (n=23), 15 IVT-treated patients with probable CAA on pre-IVT MRI were identified. In these 15 patients, clinical, biological and MRI characteristics were compared between patients with vs. without post-IVT hemorrhage and between patients with poor (MRS 3-6) vs. good (MRS 0-2) functional outcome at discharge.
Prognosis of Cerebral Small Vessel Disease
Cerebral Amyloid AngiopathySmall Vessel Cerebrovascular Disease2 morePrognosis of small vessel disease (SVD) depends on the underlying type of SVD and index manifestation. The aim of this prospective, observational cohort study is to determine the risk of different outcome events among patients with SVD according to the type of index presentation.
Cortical Superficial Siderosis and Risk of Recurrent Intracerebral Hemorrhage in Cerebral Amyloid...
Cerebral Amyloid AngiopathyCerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a major cause of lobar intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) in the elderly with high risk of recurrence. The investigators aim to determine the relationship between cortical superficial siderosis (cSS), a MRI hemorrhagic marker of CAA and the risk of symptomatic ICH recurrence in a multicentric prospective cohort of patients with acute lobar ICH related to CAA. The investigators hypothesize that patients with cSS have an increased risk of recurrent symptomatic ICH relative to those without cSS.