• Lancet neurology · Feb 2020

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study

    Endovascular treatment versus standard medical treatment for vertebrobasilar artery occlusion (BEST): an open-label, randomised controlled trial.

    • Xinfeng Liu, Qiliang Dai, Ruidong Ye, Wenjie Zi, Yuxiu Liu, Huaiming Wang, Wusheng Zhu, Minmin Ma, Qin Yin, Min Li, Xinying Fan, Wen Sun, Yunfei Han, Qiushi Lv, Rui Liu, Dong Yang, Zhonghua Shi, Dequan Zheng, Xiaorong Deng, Yue Wan, Zhen Wang, Yu Geng, Xingyu Chen, Zhiming Zhou, Geng Liao, Ping Jin, Yumin Liu, Xintong Liu, Meng Zhang, Feng Zhou, Hongchao Shi, Yunfeng Zhang, Fuqiang Guo, Congguo Yin, Guozhong Niu, Mei Zhang, Xueli Cai, Qiyi Zhu, Zhonglun Chen, Yingchun Liang, Bing Li, Min Lin, Wei Wang, Haowen Xu, Xinmin Fu, Wenhua Liu, Xiguang Tian, Zili Gong, Haicun Shi, Chuanming Wang, Penghua Lv, Zhonghai Tao, Liangfu Zhu, Shiquan Yang, Wei Hu, Pingzhou Jiang, David S Liebeskind, Vitor M Pereira, Thomas Leung, Bernard Yan, Stephen Davis, Gelin Xu, Raul G Nogueira, and BEST Trial Investigators.
    • Department of Neurology, Jinling Hospital, Medical School of Nanjing University, Nanjing, China; Stroke Center and Department of Neurology, First Affiliated Hospital of University of Science and Technology of China, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China. Electronic address: xfliu2@ustc.edu.cn.
    • Lancet Neurol. 2020 Feb 1; 19 (2): 115-122.

    BackgroundPrevious randomised trials have shown an overwhelming benefit of mechanical thrombectomy for treating patients with stroke caused by large vessel occlusion of the anterior circulation. Whether endovascular treatment is beneficial for vertebrobasilar artery occlusion remains unknown. In this study, we aimed to investigate the safety and efficacy of endovascular treatment of acute strokes due to vertebrobasilar artery occlusion.MethodsWe did a multicentre, randomised, open-label trial, with blinded outcome assessment of thrombectomy in patients presenting within 8 h of vertebrobasilar occlusion at 28 centres in China. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to endovascular therapy plus standard medical therapy (intervention group) or standard medical therapy alone (control group). The randomisation sequence was computer-generated and stratified by participating centres. Allocation concealment was implemented by use of sealed envelopes. The primary outcome was a modified Rankin scale (mRS) score of 3 or lower (indicating ability to walk unassisted) at 90 days, assessed on an intention-to-treat basis. The primary safety outcome was mortality at 90 days. Secondary safety endpoints included the rates of symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage, device-related complications, and other severe adverse events. The BEST trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02441556.FindingsBetween April 27, 2015, and Sept 27, 2017, we assessed 288 patients for eligibility. The trial was terminated early after 131 patients had been randomly assigned (66 patients to the intervention group and 65 to the control group) because of high crossover rate and poor recruitment. In the intention-to-treat analysis, there was no evidence of a difference in the proportion of participants with mRS 0-3 at 90 days according to treatment (28 [42%] of 66 patients in the intervention group vs 21 [32%] of 65 in the control group; adjusted odds ratio [OR] 1·74, 95% CI 0·81-3·74). Secondary prespecified analyses of the primary outcome, done to assess the effect of crossovers, showed higher rates of mRS 0-3 at 90 days in patients who actually received the intervention compared with those who received standard medical therapy alone in both per-protocol (28 [44%] of 63 patients with intervention vs 13 [25%] of 51 with standard therapy; adjusted OR 2·90, 95% CI 1·20-7·03) and as-treated (36 [47%] of 77 patients with intervention vs 13 [24%] of 54 with standard therapy; 3·02, 1·31-7·00) populations. The 90-day mortality was similar between groups (22 [33%] of 66 patients in the intervention vs 25 [38%] of 65 in the control group; p=0·54) despite a numerically higher prevalence of symptomatic intracranial haemorrhage in the intervention group.InterpretationThere was no evidence of a difference in favourable outcomes of patients receiving endovascular therapy compared with those receiving standard medical therapy alone. Results might have been confounded by loss of equipoise over the course of the trial, resulting in poor adherence to the assigned study treatment and a reduced sample size due to the early termination of the study.FundingJiangsu Provincial Special Program of Medical Science.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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