Phase 3
N=11,016
THALES - Acute STroke or Transient IscHaemic Attack Treated With TicAgreLor and ASA for PrEvention of Stroke and Death
Acute Ischaemic Stroke · Transient Ischaemic Attack
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03354429 ↗Enrolled (actual)
11,016
Serious AEs
10.7%
Results posted
Dec 2020
Primary outcome: Primary: Composite of Subsequent Stroke or Death — 303; 362 Participants — p=0.015
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- Phase 3
- Interventions
- Ticagrelor (Drug); Placebo (Drug)
- Age
- Adult, Older Adult · 40+ yrs
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- AstraZeneca
- Primary completion
- Dec 2019
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Composite of Subsequent Stroke or Death |
303; 362 | 0.015 sig |
| SECONDARY Ischaemic Stroke |
276; 345 | 0.004 sig |
| SECONDARY Number of Participants With Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) Score >1 at Visit 3 |
1282; 1284 | 0.613 |
Summary
Study to investigate if the study drug ticagrelor and ASA is more effective than Placebo (inactive tablet) and ASA in preventing new stroke events
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- Provision of signed informed consent prior to any study-specific procedure
- ≥40 years of age
- Acute onset of cerebral ischaemia due to
- AIS with NIHSS ≤5. AIS is defined as acute onset of neurological deficit attributed to focal brain ischaemia, and either of the following:
- Persistent signs or symptoms of the ischaemic event at the time o randomisation, OR
- Acute ischaemic brain lesion documented before randomisation by computed tomography (CT) scan or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (diffusion-weighted imaging) and that could account for the clinical presentation
- High-risk TIA, defined as neurological deficit of acute onset attributed to focal ischaemia of the brain by history or examination with complete resolution of the deficit, and at least one of the following:
- ABCD2 score ≥6 and TIA symptoms not limited to isolated numbness, isolated visual changes, or isolated dizziness/vertigo
- Symptomatic intracranial arterial occlusive disease that could account for the clinical presentation, documented by transcranial Doppler or vascular imaging and defined as at least 50% narrowing in the diameter of the vessel lumen
- Internal carotid arterial occlusive disease that could account for the clinical presentation, documented by Doppler, ultrasound, or vascular imaging and defined as at least 50% narrowing in diameter of the vessel lumen
- Randomisation occurring within 24 hours after onset of symptoms; for wake-up strokes (when the time of symptom onset is not known), within 24 hours from the time point at which the patient was reported to be in their normal condition
- CT or MRI performed after symptom onset ruling out intracranial haemorrhage or other pathology, such as vascular malformation, tumour, or abscess that according
to the Investigator could explain symptoms or contraindicate study treatment
Exclusion Criteria
- Need for or an anticipated need for any of the following:
- Dual antiplatelet therapy with ASA and P2Y12 inhibitors (including patients with carotid artery stenting and percutaneous coronary intervention)
- Antiplatelets other than ASA (eg, GPIIb/IIIa inhibitors, clopidogrel, ticlopidine, prasugrel, dipyridamole, ozagrel, cilostazol, ticagrelor) and other antithrombotic agents with antiplatelet effects, including traditional/herbal medicine agents
- Anticoagulants (eg, warfarin, oral thrombin and factor Xa inhibitors, bivalirudin, hirudin, argatroban, fondaparinux, or unfractionated heparin and long-term treatment with low-molecular weight heparins). Short-term treatment (≤7 days) with low-dose low-molecular weight heparin may be used in immobilised patients at the discretion of the Investigator
- Any history of atrial fibrillation/flutter, ventricular aneurysm, or suspicion of other cardioembolic pathology for TIA or stroke
- Patients who should receive or have received any intravenous or intra-arterial thrombolysis or mechanical thrombectomy within 24 hours prior to randomisation
- Planned carotid endarterectomy that requires halting investigational product within 3 days of randomisation or is expected to require unblinding of investigational product (planned carotid endarterectomy is in itself not an exclusion criterion)
- History of previous intracranial haemorrhage at any time (asymptomatic microbleeds do not qualify), gastrointestinal haemorrhage within the past 6 months, or major surgery within 30 days
- Patients considered to be at risk of bradycardic events (eg, known sick sinus syndrome or second- or third-degree atrioventricular block) unless already treated with a permanent pacemaker
- Inability of the patient to understand and/or comply with study procedures and/or follow-up, in the opinion of the Investigator
- Known hypersensitivity to ticagrelor or ASA
- Need for or an anticipated need for oral or intravenous therapy with any of the following:
- Strong cytochrome P450 3A (CYP3A4) inhibitors (eg, ketoconazole, clarithromycin [but not er
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03354429). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.