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Safety and efficacy of GABAA ?5 antagonist S44819 in patients with ischaemic stroke: a multicentre, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial - 19/02/20

Doi : 10.1016/S1474-4422(20)30004-1 
Hugues Chabriat, ProfMD a, Claudio L Bassetti, ProfMD b, Ute Marx, MD c, Marie-Laure Audoli-Inthavong, PharmD c, Aurore Sors, PhD c, Estelle Lambert c, Marine Wattez c, Dirk M Hermann, ProfMD d,
on behalf of the

RESTORE BRAIN study investigators

  Listed in the appendix
Katharina ALTHAUS, Sergi AMARO, Hee-Joon BAE, Zbigniew BAK, Leonardo BARBARINI, Pietro BASSI, Rodrigo BAZAN, Daniel BERECZKI, Tomasz BERKOWICZ, Joerg BERROUSCHOT, Dylan BLACQUIERE, Waldemar BROLA, Kenneth BUTCHER, Pere CARDONA, Jae-Kwan CHA, Geoffrey CLOUD, David COHEN, Charlotte CORDONNIER, Attila CSANYI, Anna CZLONKOWSKA, Stephen DAVIS, Jesse DAWSON, Nina DE KLIPPEL, Christian DENIER, Philippe DESFONTAINES, Hans-Christoph DIENER, Peter DIOSZEGHY, Diederik Willem DIPPEL, Laura DORADO, Andras FOLYOVICH, Gabriel Rodriguez FREITAS, Mauricio Andre FRIEDRICH, Waldemar FRYZE, Rubens Jose GAGLIARDI, Marianna GOTTSCHAL, Rohan GRIMLEY, Martin GROND, Klaus GRÖSCHEL, Hassan HOSSEINI, Yangha HWANG, Bernd KALLMUENZER, Usman KHAN, Jong Sung KIM, Tim KLEINIG, Agnes KOVES, Aida LAGO MARTIN, Anetta LASEK-BAL, Giuseppe LEMBO, Robin LEMMENS, Ralf LINDERT, Luiz Carlos PORCELLO MARRONE, Maite MARTINEZ ZABALETA, Jean-Louis MAS, Jaime MASJUAN VALLEJO, Mikael MAZIGHI, Cesar MINELLI, Amit MISTRI, Carlos MOLINA, Francisco MONICHE ALVAREZ, Carla Heloisa CABRAL MORO, Wim MULLENERS, Darius NABAVI, Jean-Philippe NEAU, Bill O’BRIEN, Csaba OVARY, Gyula PANCZEL, Man Seok PARK, Thanh PHAN, Suzanne RAGAB, Konrad REJDAK, Gabriel RODRIGUEZ DE FREITAS, Christine ROFFE, Jaume ROQUER GONZALEZ, Luisa ROVER, Gisele SAMPAIO SILVA, Peter SCHELLINGER, Tomas SEGURA MARTIN, Louise SHAW, Igor SIBON, Ondrej SKODA, Didier SMADJA, Piotr SOBOLEWSKI, Hassan SODA, Nikola SPRIGG, Maciej SWIAT, Laszlo SZAPARY, Norbert SZEGEDI, Danilo TONI, Attila VALIKOVICS, Geert VANHOOREN, Laszlo VECSEI, Theodore WEIN, Andrew WONG, Alvaro XIMENEZ CARRILLO

a Department of Neurology, Lariboisière Hospital, Paris Diderot University and INSERM U1141, Paris, France 
b Department of Neurology, University Hospital Berne, Berne, Switzerland 
c Institut de Recherches Internationales Servier (IRIS), Suresnes, France 
d Department of Neurology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 

*Correspondence to: Prof Dirk M Hermann, Department of Neurology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, D-45122 Essen, GermanyDepartment of NeurologyUniversity Hospital EssenUniversity of Duisburg-EssenEssenD-45122Germany

Summary

Background

S44819, a selective GABAA α5 receptor antagonist, reduces tonic post-ischaemic inhibition of the peri-infarct cortex. S44819 improved stroke recovery in rodents and increased cortical excitability in a transcranial magnetic stimulation study in healthy volunteers. The Randomized Efficacy and Safety Trial of Oral GABAA α5 antagonist S44819 after Recent ischemic Event (RESTORE BRAIN) aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of S44819 for enhancing clinical recovery of patients with ischaemic stroke.

Methods

RESTORE BRAIN was an international, randomised, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled, multicentre phase 2 trial that evaluated the safety and efficacy of oral S44189 in patients with recent ischaemic stroke. The study was done in specialised stroke units in 92 actively recruiting centres in 14 countries: ten were European countries (Belgium, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Spain, and the UK) and four were non-European countries (Australia, Brazil, Canada, and South Korea). Patients aged 18–85 years with acute ischaemic stroke involving cerebral cortex (National Institute of Health Stroke Scale [NIHSS] score 7–20) without previous disability were eligible for inclusion. Participants were randomly assigned to receive 150 mg S44819 twice a day, 300 mg S44819 twice a day, or placebo twice a day by a balanced, non-adaptive randomisation method with a 1:1:1 ratio. Treatment randomisation and allocation were centralised via the interactive web response system using computer-generated random sequences with a block size of 3. Blinding of treatment was achieved by identical appearance and taste of all sachets. Patients, investigators and individuals involved in the analysis of the trial were masked to group assignment. The primary endpoint was the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score 90 days from onset of treatment, evaluated by shift analysis (predefined main analysis) or by dichotomised analyses using 0–1 versus 2–6 and 0–2 versus 3–6 cutoffs (predefined secondary analysis). Secondary endpoints were the effects of S44819 on the NIHSS and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) scores, time needed to complete parts A and B of the Trail Making Test, and the Barthel index. Efficacy analyses were done on all patients who received at least one dose of treatment and had at least one mRS score taken after day 5 (specifically, on or after day 30). Safety was compared across treatment groups for all patients who received at least one dose of treatment. The study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02877615.

Findings

Between Dec 19, 2016, and Nov 16, 2018, 585 patients were enrolled in the study. Of these, 197 (34%) were randomly assigned to receive 150 mg S44819 twice a day, 195 (33%) to receive 300 mg S44819 twice a day, and 193 (33%) to receive placebo twice a day. 189 (96%) of 197 patients in the 150 mg S44819 group, 188 (96%) of 195 patients in the 300 mg S44819 group, and 191 (99%) patients in the placebo group received at least one dose of treatment and had at least one mRS score taken after day 5, and were included in efficacy analyses. 195 (99%) of 197 patients in the 150 mg S44819 group, 194 (99%) of 195 patients in the 300 mg S44819 group, and 193 (100%) patients in the placebo group received at least one dose of treatment, and were included in safety analyses. The primary endpoint of mRS at day 90 did not differ between each of the two S44819 groups and the placebo group (OR 0·91 [95% CI 0·64–1·31]; p=0·80 for 150 mg S44819 compared with placebo and OR 1·17 [95% CI 0·81–1·67]; p=0·80 for 300 mg S44819 compared with placebo). Likewise, dichotomised mRS scores at day 90 (mRS 0–2 vs 3–6 or mRS 0–1 vs 2–6) did not differ between groups. Secondary endpoints did not reveal any significant group differences. The median NIHSS score at day 90 did not differ between groups (4 [IQR 2–8] in 150 mg S44819 group, 4 [2–7] in 300 mg S44819 group, and 4 [2–6] in placebo group), nor did the number of patients at day 90 with an NIHSS score of up to 5 (95 [61%] of 156 in 150 mg S44819 group, 106 [66%] of 161 in 300 mg S44819 group, and 104 [66%] of 157 in placebo group) versus more than 5 (61 [39%] in 150 mg S44819 group, 55 [34%] in 300 mg S44819 group, and 53 [34%] in placebo group). Likewise, the median MoCA score (22·0 [IQR 17·0–26·0] in 150 mg S44819 group, 23·0 [19·0–26·5] in 300 mg S44819 group, and 22·0 [17·0–26·0] in placebo group), time needed to complete parts A (50 s [IQR 42–68] in 150 mg S44819 group, 49 s [36–63] in 300 mg S44819 group, and 50 s [38–68] in placebo group) and B (107 s [81–144] in 150 mg S44819 group, 121 s [76–159] in 300 mg S44819 group, and 130 s [86–175] in placebo group) of the Trail Making Test, and the Barthel index (90 [IQR 60–100] in 150 mg S44819 group, 90 [70–100] in 300 mg S44819 group, and 90 [70–100] in placebo group) were similar in all groups. Number and type of adverse events were similar between the three groups. There were no drug-related adverse events and no drug-related deaths.

Interpretation

There was no evidence that S44819 improved clinical outcome in patients after ischaemic stroke, and thus S44819 cannot be recommended for stroke therapy. The concept of tonic inhibition after stroke should be re-evaluated in humans.

Funding

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