4.7 Article

The Stroke Preclinical Assessment Network: Rationale, Design, Feasibility, and Stage 1 Results

Journal

STROKE
Volume 53, Issue 5, Pages 1802-1812

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.121.038047

Keywords

animals; cerebral arteries; clinical trial; research design; translational research

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 NS099455, 1UO1NS113356, R01NS112511, R01NS110378, R01NS117565, 19TPA34850076]
  2. NIH [U01NS113444, R01NS102583, R01NS105894, U01 NS113443, U01NS113445, R35HL139926, R01NS109910, U01NS113388, U24NS107247, U24NS113452]
  3. NIH National Center for Advancing Translational Science (NCATS) UCLA CTSI Grant [UL1 TR001881-01]
  4. NIN [U01NS113451]
  5. National Institutes of Health [P41EB015922]
  6. Chan Zuckerberg Initiative DAF, an advised fund of Silicon Valley Community Foundation [2020-225670]

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Cerebral ischemia and reperfusion lead to neurological disabilities, and developing successful stroke treatments has been challenging. The Stroke Preclinical Assessment Network (SPAN) aims to reduce bias in treatment selection for clinical studies by rigorously assessing candidate treatments across multiple research laboratories. The first stage of SPAN successfully implemented standardized procedures, randomization, and blinded assessment. Subsequent stages will evaluate candidate treatments using aged animals and animals with comorbid conditions.
Cerebral ischemia and reperfusion initiate cellular events in brain that lead to neurological disability. Investigating these cellular events provides ample targets for developing new treatments. Despite considerable work, no such therapy has translated into successful stroke treatment. Among other issues-such as incomplete mechanistic knowledge and faulty clinical trial design-a key contributor to prior translational failures may be insufficient scientific rigor during preclinical assessment: nonblinded outcome assessment; missing randomization; inappropriate sample sizes; and preclinical assessments in young male animals that ignore relevant biological variables, such as age, sex, and relevant comorbid diseases. Promising results are rarely replicated in multiple laboratories. We sought to address some of these issues with rigorous assessment of candidate treatments across 6 independent research laboratories. The Stroke Preclinical Assessment Network (SPAN) implements state-of-the-art experimental design to test the hypothesis that rigorous preclinical assessment can successfully reduce or eliminate common sources of bias in choosing treatments for evaluation in clinical studies. SPAN is a randomized, placebo-controlled, blinded, multilaboratory trial using a multi-arm multi-stage protocol to select one or more putative stroke treatments with an implied high likelihood of success in human clinical stroke trials. The first stage of SPAN implemented procedural standardization and experimental rigor. All participating research laboratories performed middle cerebral artery occlusion surgery adhering to a common protocol and rapidly enrolled 913 mice in the first of 4 planned stages with excellent protocol adherence, remarkable data completion and low rates of subject loss. SPAN stage 1 successfully implemented treatment masking, randomization, prerandomization inclusion/exclusion criteria, and blinded assessment to exclude bias. Our data suggest that a large, multilaboratory, preclinical assessment effort to reduce known sources of bias is feasible and practical. Subsequent SPAN stages will evaluate candidate treatments for potential success in future stroke clinical trials using aged animals and animals with comorbid conditions.

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