Penumbral Rescue by Normobaric O=O Administration in Patients With Ischaemic Stroke and Target Mismatch ProFile: A Phase II Proof-of-Concept Trial

Acronym

PROOF

Description of the granted funding

Ischemic stroke (IS), caused by occlusion of arteries that supply blood to the brain, remains a leading cause of mortality and morbidity in the world. Disruption of blood and oxygen supply to the brain leads to neuronal death in the ischemic core within minutes. The hypoperfused tissue surrounding the ischemic core, the penumbra, is at high risk for infarction over time but still salvageable. Neuroprotective “bridging”, sustaining the penumbra until reperfusion, may widen the therapeutic window, make recanalization treatments accessible to more patients and improve overall IS outcomes. As ischemic cell death is primarily mediated by hypoxia, increasing oxygen supply to the penumbra seems THE logical approach. In animal models of IS, normobaric hyperoxygenation (NBHO) significantly increased penumbral oxygen pressure and attenuated brain injury when initiated early after onset of ischaemia and vessel occlusion was transient (35 to 50% infarct volume reduction). The PROOF project now seeks to demonstrate that NBHO (high-flow 100% oxygen at >45 L/min via a non-rebreather mask, or FiO2=1.0 for intubation/ventilation) reduces infarct growth from baseline to 24 hours compared to standard treatment if administered ≤3 hours after onset of anterior circulation IS, in patients with proximal vessel occlusion and salvageable tissue at risk. The study is multi-center, adaptive phase-IIb, randomized, open-label with blinded-endpoint (PROBE design). The primary efficacy criterion will be infarct growth from baseline to 24 hours. Secondary endpoints will be NIHSS 24h, categorical shift in the pre-stroke modified Rankin Score, QoL and cognition at day 90. Potential surrogate biomarkers, health economics and societal impacts will be assessed. If NBHO proves its neuroprotective potential in this selected population, phase-III trials in all IS patients may be undertaken. Considering its low costs and ease of use, NBHO may impact stroke care worldwide.
Show more

Starting year

2017

End year

2023

Granted funding

117 900.58 €
Participant
KKS-NETZWERK EV -NETZWERK DER KOORDINIERUNGSZENTREN FUR KLINISCHE STUDIEN (DE)
37 161.31 €
Third party
UNIVERSITAETSKLINIKUM HEIDELBERG (DE)
1 270 873.75 €
Participant
EPPDATA GMBH (DE)
737 875 €
Participant
GROUPE HOSPITALIER UNIVERSITAIRE PARIS PSYCHIATRIE ET NEUROSCIENCES (FR)
103 346.56 €
Participant
ECRIN EUROPEAN CLINICAL RESEARCH INFRASTRUCTURE NETWORK (FR)
187 614.94 €
Participant
Universitaetsklinikum Tuebingen (DE)
245 991.63 €
Third party
FAKULTNI NEMOCNICE U SV. ANNY V BRNE (CZ)
76 692 €
Participant
LUXEMBOURG INSTITUTE OF HEALTH (LU)
121 424 €
Third party
FUNDACIO HOSPITAL UNIVERSITARI VALL D'HEBRON - INSTITUT DE RECERCA (ES)
776 503.2 €
Participant
STROKE ALLIANCE FOR EUROPE (BE)
66 625 €
Participant
CENTRE HOSPITALIER UNIVERSITAIRE VAUDOIS (CH)
26 225 €
Participant
VASTRA GOTALANDS LANS LANDSTING (SE)
3 948.75 €
Participant
Masarykova univerzita (CZ)
21 808 €
Third party
KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT LEUVEN (BE)
159 625 €
Participant
EBERHARD KARLS UNIVERSITAET TUEBINGEN (DE)
1 293 217.22 €
Coordinator

Amount granted

5 246 832 €

Funder

European Union

Funding instrument

Research and Innovation action

Framework programme

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Call

Programme part
Health (5290)
Treating and managing disease (5299)
Topic
New therapies for chronic diseases (SC1-PM-09-2016)
Call ID
H2020-SC1-2016-RTD

Other information

Funding decision number

733379

Identified topics

brain, neuroscience