Thrombolytic therapy with streptokinase in acute ischemic stroke

1996 
Background In patients with acute ischemic stroke, early treatment with thrombolytic agents is thought to permit reperfusion of ischemic neurons and to promote recovery of function. The Multicenter Acute Stroke-Trial - Europe (MAST-E) was designed to assess the efficacy and safety of streptokinase in patients with acute ischemic stroke.Methods Patients with moderate-to-severe ischemia in the territory of the middle cerebral artery were randomly assigned to receive streptokinase (1.5 million units over a period of one hour) or placebo within six hours after the onset of stroke. The primary efficacy outcome was a binary criterion combining mortality and severe disability at six months, with severe disability defined as a score of 3 or higher on the Rankin scale. The primary safety outcomes were mortality at 10 days and cerebral hemorrhage.Results All randomized patients (156 in the streptokinase group and 154 in the placebo group) were evaluated at six months. The incidence of the primary efficacy outcome was similar in the two groups (124 patients in the streptokinase group and 126 in the placebo group died or had a Rankin score greater than or equal to 3). However, the mortality rate at 10 days was significantly higher in the streptokinase group than in the placebo group (34.0 percent vs. 18.2 percent, P=0.002). The higher rate in the streptokinase group was mainly due to the hemorrhagic transformation of ischemic cerebral infarcts. At six months, more deaths had occurred in the streptokinase group than in the placebo group (73 vs. 59, P=0.06).Conclusions In patients with acute ischemic stroke, treatment with streptokinase resulted in an increase in mortality. The routine use of streptokinase cannot be recommended in acute ischemic stroke. (C) 1996, Massachusetts Medical Society.
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