TY - JOUR
T1 - Intravenous glibenclamide for cerebral oedema after large hemispheric stroke (CHARM)
T2 - a phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised trial
AU - CHARM Trial investigators
AU - Sheth, Kevin N.
AU - Albers, Gregory W.
AU - Saver, Jeffrey L.
AU - Campbell, Bruce C.V.
AU - Molyneaux, Bradley J.
AU - Hinson, H. E.
AU - Cordonnier, Charlotte
AU - Steiner, Thorsten
AU - Toyoda, Kazunori
AU - Wintermark, Max
AU - Littauer, Ross
AU - Collins, Jessica
AU - Lucas, Nisha
AU - Nogueira, Raul G.
AU - Simard, J. Marc
AU - Wald, Michael
AU - Dawson, Kate
AU - Kimberly, W. Taylor
AU - Abraham, Michael
AU - Acosta, Indrani
AU - Agostoni, Elio Clemente
AU - Aguera Morales, Eduardo
AU - Akaike, Yuji
AU - Ale Bark, Samir
AU - Alexandrov, Andrei
AU - Altschul, Dorothea
AU - Arenillas Lara, Juan Francisco
AU - Arias Rivas, Susana
AU - Arnold, Marcel
AU - Asimos, Andrew
AU - Bar, Michal
AU - Barlinn, Kristian
AU - Beccia, Mario
AU - Benesch, Curtis
AU - Bereczki, Daniel
AU - Berk, Julie
AU - Berkeley, Jennifer
AU - Berrouschot, Joerg
AU - Bettermann, Kerstin
AU - Bevers, Matthew
AU - Boesel, Julian
AU - Bogdanov, Enver
AU - Bonato, Sara
AU - Bornstein, Natan
AU - Boutwell, Christine
AU - Bowling, Susana
AU - Brown, Helen
AU - Bruno, Askiel
AU - Burgin, William
AU - Bustamante, Rafael
AU - Cabral Moro, Carla Heloísa
AU - Cao, Wenfeng
AU - Carandang, Raphael
AU - Cardona Portela, Pedro
AU - Castro, Pedro
AU - Cativo, Maria
AU - Cereda, Carlo
AU - Cerejo, Russell
AU - Chang, Chiung Chih
AU - Cheng, Roger
AU - Chin, Masaki
AU - Ching, Marilou
AU - Christensen, Hanne
AU - Chung, Lee
AU - Clark, Jonie
AU - Clark, Wayne
AU - Cloud, Geoffrey
AU - Cogez, Julien
AU - Comi, Giancarlo
AU - Cordato, Dennis
AU - Coull, Bruce
AU - Cronin, Carolyn
AU - Csanyi, Attila
AU - Cullis, Paul
AU - Czeisler, Barry
AU - Dangayach, Neha
AU - Datta, Mohit
AU - Debouverie, Marc
AU - Demchuk, Andrew
AU - Denier, Christian
AU - Desfontaines, Philippe
AU - Devlin, Thomas
AU - Dhar, Rajat
AU - Diomedi, Marina
AU - Dioszeghy, Peter
AU - Diringer, Michael
AU - Dixit, Anand
AU - Dong, Qiang
AU - Eichel, Roni
AU - Elliott, Jamie
AU - Fan, Dongsheng
AU - Fernandez Sanchez, Victoria Eugenia
AU - Ferro, José Manuel
AU - Finocchi, Cinzia
AU - Foreman, Brandon
AU - Fortea Cabo, Gerardo
AU - Freire Goncalves, Antonio
AU - Fukuyama, Kozo
AU - Gamero Garcia, Miguel Angel
AU - Garcia Esperon, Carlos
AU - Geng, Deqin
AU - Ghoshal, Shivani
AU - Gomes, Joao
AU - Gordon, Errol
AU - Guillon, Benoit
AU - Hagihara, Yasushi
AU - Hallevi, Hen
AU - Halse, Omid
AU - Han, Moon Ku
AU - Hargis, Mitch
AU - Harnof, Sagi
AU - Harsany, Michal
AU - Hasegawa, Yasuhiro
AU - Hassan, Ameer
AU - Hayasaka, Michihiro
AU - He, Jincai
AU - Hemelsoet, Dimitri
AU - Henon, Hilde
AU - Herzig, Roman
AU - Hill, Michael
AU - Hinduja, Archana
AU - Hirano, Teruyuki
AU - Horev, Anat
AU - Howell, Bradley
AU - Hu, Xingyue
AU - Huang, David
AU - Hwang, Yangha
AU - Ifergane, Gal
AU - Isayev, Yevgeniy
AU - Ito, Yasuhiro
AU - Iversen, Helle
AU - Jatuzis, Dalius
AU - Jeng, Jiann Shing
AU - Jeon, Sang Beom
AU - Jeong, Jin Heon
AU - Ji, Qiuhong
AU - Kahles, Timo
AU - Kallmuenzer, Bernd
AU - Kaneko, Chikako
AU - Kanzawa, Takao
AU - Kasner, Scott
AU - Kawabata, Masayuki
AU - Kelly, Adam
AU - Kerrigan, Deborah
AU - Keshary, Sanjeev
AU - Khanna, Anna
AU - Kidjemet-Piskac, Spomenka
AU - Kidwell, Chelsea
AU - Kim, Minjee
AU - Kimura, Kazumi
AU - Kimura, Naoto
AU - Kin, Shigenari
AU - Kirmani, Jawad
AU - Kitazawa, Kazuo
AU - Kleinig, Timothy
AU - Koehrmann, Martin
AU - Koga, Masatoshi
AU - Kollmar, Rainer
AU - Konno, Hiromu
AU - Krause, Martin
AU - Kuga, Yoshihiro
AU - Kullman, Dimitri
AU - Kurka, Natalia
AU - Lago Martin, Aida
AU - Latorre, Julius (Gene)
AU - LeDoux, David
AU - Leal Loureiro, Jose
AU - Lebedeva, Anna
AU - Lee, Tsong Hai
AU - Leker, Ronen
AU - Lemmens, Robin
AU - Li, Yansheng
AU - Lioutas, Vasileious Arsenios
AU - Liu, Chunfeng
AU - Liu, Liping
AU - Liu, Wei
AU - Liu, Yaling
AU - Longoni, Marco
AU - Lopez, George
AU - Lord, Aaron
AU - Lu, Zuneng
AU - Machida, Akira
AU - Magoni, Mauro
AU - Malik, Maheen
AU - Marcheselli, Simona
AU - Marques Pontes Neto, Octávio
AU - Martin, Jerry
AU - Martino, Stephen
AU - Martins Maia Carvalho, Fernanda
AU - Masjuan Vallejo, Jaime
AU - Matijosaitis, Vaidas
AU - Mayer, Stephan
AU - McGrade, Harold
AU - Mehta, Sanal
AU - Melmed, Kara
AU - Melnikova, Elena
AU - Messe, Steven
AU - Meyer, Brett
AU - Miller, Chad
AU - Minnerup, Jens
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Background: No treatment is available to prevent brain oedema, which can occur after a large hemispheric infarction. Glibenclamide has previously been shown to improve functional outcome and reduce neurological or oedema-related death in patients younger than 70 years who were at risk of brain oedema after an acute ischaemic stroke. We aimed to assess whether intravenous glibenclamide could improve functional outcome at 90 days in patients with large hemispheric infarction. Methods: CHARM was a phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised trial conducted across 143 acute stroke centres in 21 countries. We included patients aged 18–85 years with a large stroke, defined either by an Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS) of 1–5 or by an ischaemic core lesion volume of 80–300 mL on CT perfusion or MRI diffusion-weighted imaging. Patients were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either intravenous glibenclamide (8·6 mg over 72 h) or placebo. The study drug was started within 10 h of stroke onset. The primary efficacy outcome was the shift in the distribution of scores on the modified Rankin Scale at day 90, as a measure of functional outcome. The primary efficacy outcome was analysed in a modified intention-to-treat population, which included all randomly assigned patients aged 18–70 years. The safety population comprised all randomly assigned patients who received a dose. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02864953). The trial was stopped early by the sponsor for strategic and operational reasons (slow enrolment because of COVID-19), before any unblinding or knowledge of the trial results. Findings: Between Aug 29, 2018, and May 23, 2023, 535 patients were enrolled and randomly assigned, of whom 518 received a dose (safety population) and 431 were aged 18–70 years and comprised the modified intention-to-treat population (217 were assigned glibenclamide and 214 placebo). The mean age of patients was 58·7 (SD 9·0) years in the placebo group and 58·0 (9·5) years in the glibenclamide group; the median US National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score was 19 (IQR 16–23) in the placebo group and 19 (IQR 16–22) in the glibenclamide group; and the mean time from stroke onset to study drug start was 8·9 h (SD 2·1) in the placebo group and 9·2 h (2·1) in the glibenclamide group. Intravenous glibenclamide was not associated with a favourable shift in the modified Rankin scale at 90 days (common odds ratio [OR] 1·17 [95% CI 0·80–1·71], p=0·42). 90-day mortality was 29% (61 of 214) in the placebo group and 32% (70 of 217) in the glibenclamide group (hazard ratio 1·20 [0·85–1·70]; p=0·30). Serious adverse events in the prespecified safety population were consistent with the known safety profile of glibenclamide and included hypoglycaemia in 15 (6%) of 259 patients in the glibenclamide group and in four (2%) of 259 patients in the placebo group, leading to dose interruption or reduction in seven (3%) patients in the glibenclamide group and in one (<1%) in the placebo group. Interpretation: Intravenous glibenclamide did not improve functional outcome in patients aged 18–70 years after large hemispheric infarction, although the trial was underpowered to make definitive conclusions because it was stopped early. Future prospective evaluation could be warranted to identify a possible benefit of intravenous glibenclamide in specific subgroups. Funding: Biogen.
AB - Background: No treatment is available to prevent brain oedema, which can occur after a large hemispheric infarction. Glibenclamide has previously been shown to improve functional outcome and reduce neurological or oedema-related death in patients younger than 70 years who were at risk of brain oedema after an acute ischaemic stroke. We aimed to assess whether intravenous glibenclamide could improve functional outcome at 90 days in patients with large hemispheric infarction. Methods: CHARM was a phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised trial conducted across 143 acute stroke centres in 21 countries. We included patients aged 18–85 years with a large stroke, defined either by an Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS) of 1–5 or by an ischaemic core lesion volume of 80–300 mL on CT perfusion or MRI diffusion-weighted imaging. Patients were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either intravenous glibenclamide (8·6 mg over 72 h) or placebo. The study drug was started within 10 h of stroke onset. The primary efficacy outcome was the shift in the distribution of scores on the modified Rankin Scale at day 90, as a measure of functional outcome. The primary efficacy outcome was analysed in a modified intention-to-treat population, which included all randomly assigned patients aged 18–70 years. The safety population comprised all randomly assigned patients who received a dose. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02864953). The trial was stopped early by the sponsor for strategic and operational reasons (slow enrolment because of COVID-19), before any unblinding or knowledge of the trial results. Findings: Between Aug 29, 2018, and May 23, 2023, 535 patients were enrolled and randomly assigned, of whom 518 received a dose (safety population) and 431 were aged 18–70 years and comprised the modified intention-to-treat population (217 were assigned glibenclamide and 214 placebo). The mean age of patients was 58·7 (SD 9·0) years in the placebo group and 58·0 (9·5) years in the glibenclamide group; the median US National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score was 19 (IQR 16–23) in the placebo group and 19 (IQR 16–22) in the glibenclamide group; and the mean time from stroke onset to study drug start was 8·9 h (SD 2·1) in the placebo group and 9·2 h (2·1) in the glibenclamide group. Intravenous glibenclamide was not associated with a favourable shift in the modified Rankin scale at 90 days (common odds ratio [OR] 1·17 [95% CI 0·80–1·71], p=0·42). 90-day mortality was 29% (61 of 214) in the placebo group and 32% (70 of 217) in the glibenclamide group (hazard ratio 1·20 [0·85–1·70]; p=0·30). Serious adverse events in the prespecified safety population were consistent with the known safety profile of glibenclamide and included hypoglycaemia in 15 (6%) of 259 patients in the glibenclamide group and in four (2%) of 259 patients in the placebo group, leading to dose interruption or reduction in seven (3%) patients in the glibenclamide group and in one (<1%) in the placebo group. Interpretation: Intravenous glibenclamide did not improve functional outcome in patients aged 18–70 years after large hemispheric infarction, although the trial was underpowered to make definitive conclusions because it was stopped early. Future prospective evaluation could be warranted to identify a possible benefit of intravenous glibenclamide in specific subgroups. Funding: Biogen.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85209251392&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S1474-4422(24)00425-3
DO - 10.1016/S1474-4422(24)00425-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 39577921
AN - SCOPUS:85209251392
SN - 1474-4422
VL - 23
SP - 1205
EP - 1213
JO - The Lancet Neurology
JF - The Lancet Neurology
IS - 12
ER -