The CASSISS Randomized Clinical Trial.
Tanya N TuranMarios-Nikos PsychogiosPublished in: Stroke (2022)
The CASSISS trial (China Angioplasty & Stenting for Symptomatic Intracranial Severe Stenosis), recently published in JAMA , is the most recent of several randomized controlled trials that have failed to show a benefit of percutaneous angioplasty and stenting over medical therapy for the prevention of stroke due to intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis. Current practice guidelines recommended that percutaneous angioplasty and stenting should not be performed routinely as a treatment for stroke prevention in patients with intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis. The CASSISS trial reinforces those recommendations and will not change practice, but it may provide some important lessons for future trial design.
Keyphrases
- study protocol
- phase iii
- healthcare
- phase ii
- clinical trial
- antiplatelet therapy
- randomized controlled trial
- atrial fibrillation
- primary care
- optic nerve
- minimally invasive
- ultrasound guided
- clinical practice
- open label
- radiofrequency ablation
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- early onset
- double blind
- systematic review
- current status
- brain injury
- coronary artery disease
- smoking cessation
- cerebral ischemia
- optical coherence tomography