Blood Pressure Management in Stroke Following Endovascular Treatment

Current guidelines from the American Heart Association/ American Stroke Association (AHA/ ASA) propose thresholds of systolic blood pressure (BP) less than 180 mm Hg and diastolic BP less than 105 mm Hg during and for the first 24 hours following endovascular treatment (EVT), which have been arbitrarily inherited from previous intravenous thrombolysis guidelines. Although there is plethora of evidence from observational cohort studies suggesting that increased BP following EVT is associated with higher likelihood of both intracranial hemorrhage and unfavorable clinical outcomes, the potential for residual confounding in these observational datasets limits their interpretation. The blooD prEssure management in sTroke following EndovasCular Treatment (DETECT) trial is a single-center, pragmatic, pilot, prospective open label, blinded end point, randomized controlled trial testing the hypothesis that intensive BP management following successful EVT is feasible. The primary objective of DETECT is to determine the feasibility of a RCT assessing the efficacy and safety of intensive BP lowering compared to standard of care in rates of hemorrhagic transformation and functional outcome following successful EVT in acute ischemic stroke patients with large vessel occlusion. We will include adult patients with acute ischemic stroke achieving successful reperfusion (TICI more or equal to 2b) of a proximal large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation after EVT. Eligible patients will be randomized 1:1 within 60 minutes from the end of the EVT procedure to either intensive (systolic BP target <140 mmHg) or standard BP management (systolic BP target <180 mmHg) for the first 48 hours after randomization. Patients with presence of concomitant ipsilateral or contralateral extracranial vessel occlusion or remaining stenosis ≥80% after the end of the EVT, and/or patients having any medical condition where randomization to either standard or intensive BP lowering would not be acceptable at the discretion of the treating physician will be excluded from participating. The trial will be embedded within an established national EVT registry that focuses on improving quality of management of patients receiving EVT for ischemic stroke.

Inclusion Criteria: - Age equal or more than 18 years. - Eligible for endovascular treatment (EVT) within 24 hours from symptom onset according to current clinical practice. - Presence of a proximal large vessel occlusion in the anterior circulation, defined as occlusion of the intracranial segment of the internal carotid artery and/or occlusion of the M1 segment or proximal M2 segment of the middle cerebral artery. - Successful recanalization after the end of the EVT procedure, defined as modified thrombolysis in cerebral ischemia (mTICI) score equal or more than 2b. - Sustained elevated systolic BP level after recanalization, defined as 2 consecutive systolic BP readings ≥ 150 mmHg (or ≥ 140 mmHg if the participant has a known history of hypertension) taken more than 5 minutes apart. - Ability of the patient or legal representative to provide informed consent. - Randomization within 60 minutes from the end of the EVT procedure. Exclusion Criteria: - Presence of concomitant ipsilateral or contralateral extracranial vessel occlusion or remaining stenosis ≥80% after the end of the EVT. - Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage after the end of EVT procedure. - Any medical condition where randomization to either standard or intensive BP lowering would not be acceptable at the discretion of the investigators and/or the treating physician. - Pregnancy. - Enrollment in another acute stroke therapeutic trial.