• LOGIN
Repository logo

BORIS Portal

Bern Open Repository and Information System

  • Publication
  • Projects
  • Funding
  • Research Data
  • Organizations
  • Researchers
  • LOGIN
Repository logo
Unibern.ch
  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. The 6-months follow-up of the TREAT-CAD trial: Aspirin versus anticoagulation for stroke prevention in patients with cervical artery dissection.
 

The 6-months follow-up of the TREAT-CAD trial: Aspirin versus anticoagulation for stroke prevention in patients with cervical artery dissection.

Options
  • Details
BORIS DOI
10.48620/85506
Date of Publication
February 5, 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Clinic of Neurology

Author
Engelter, Stefan T
Enz, Lukas S
Ravanelli, Flavia
Kaufmann, Josefin E
Gensicke, Henrik
Schaedelin, Sabine
Luft, Andreas R
Globas, Christoph
Goeggel-Simonetti, Barbara
Clinic of Neurology
Fischer, Urs
Clinic of Neurology
Strambo, Davide
Kägi, Georg
Clinic of Neurology
Nedeltchev, Krassen
Clinic of Neurology
Kahles, Timo
Kellert, Lars
Rosenbaum, Sverre
von Rennenberg, Regina
Brehm, Alex
Seiffge, David
Clinic of Neurology
Renaud, Susanne
Brandt, Tobias
Sarikaya, Hakan
Clinic of Neurology
Zietz, Annaelle
Wischmann, Johannes
Polymeris, Alexandros A
Fischer, Sandro
Bonati, Leo H
De Marchis, Gian Marco
Peters, Nils
Nolte, Christian H
Christensen, Hanne
Wegener, Susanne
Psychogios, Marios-Nikos
Arnold, Marcel
Clinic of Neurology
Lyrer, Philippe
Traenka, Christopher
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
European Stroke Journal
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2396-9881
2396-9873
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1177/23969873251315362
PubMed ID
39910883
Uncontrolled Keywords

Cervical artery disse...

stroke in the young

treatment

treatment duration

Description
Introduction
Cervical artery dissection is a major cause of stroke in the young. The optimal choice and duration of antithrombotic treatment for stroke prevention are debated, particularly beyond 3 months after symptom onset.Patients And Methods
TREAT-CAD (TREATment of Cervical Artery Dissection) was a randomized controlled trial with blinded outcome assessment comparing non-inferiority of aspirin to anticoagulation (Vitamin-K-antagonists) in participants with symptomatic, Magnetic-Resonance-(MR)-imaging-verified cervical artery dissection. TREAT-CAD could not establish non-inferiority of aspirin to anticoagulation at 3 months. Thereafter participants could continue antithrombotic medication and obtained a standardized assessment of clinical and MR-Imaging outcomes between 3 and 6 months. As crossover to the other treatment arm was possible, we performed an as-treated analysis as main analysis. The main outcomes were new clinical (ischemic stroke, intracranial/major extracranial bleeding, or death) and new MR-Imaging outcomes (ischemic or hemorrhagic brain lesions).Results
Among the 122 participants in the as-treated analysis, 3/93 (3.2%) aspirin-treated participants had new clinical (n = 1) and MRI-outcomes (n = 2) between 3 and 6 months while 1/29 (3.4%) anticoagulated participants had an MRI-outcome (n = 1). All outcome events were hemorrhagic while ischemic events were absent. No deaths occurred. This yields an absolute difference of 0.2% (95% CI -8.0% to 7.5%, p = 1.0).Discussion And Conclusion
During the extended follow-up period of a controlled randomized trial comparing aspirin to anticoagulation in cervical artery dissection, outcomes between 3 and 6 months after randomization occurred rarely, similarly often in both groups and were exclusively hemorrhagic events. Thus, studies balancing benefits versus harms of antithrombotic treatment beyond 3 months are warranted. Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02046460. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02046460.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/205114
Show full item
File(s)
FileFile TypeFormatSizeLicensePublisher/Copright statementContent
engelter-et-al-2025-the-6-months-follow-up-of-the-treat-cad-trial-aspirin-versus-anticoagulation-for-stroke-prevention.pdftextAdobe PDF1.07 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
BORIS Portal
Bern Open Repository and Information System
Build: d1c7f7 [27.06. 13:56]
Explore
  • Projects
  • Funding
  • Publications
  • Research Data
  • Organizations
  • Researchers
More
  • About BORIS Portal
  • Send Feedback
  • Cookie settings
  • Service Policy
Follow us on
  • Mastodon
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
UniBe logo