Safety and tolerability of arundic acid in acute ischemic stroke JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES Pettigrew, L. C., Kasner, S. E., Albers, G. W., Gorman, M., Grotta, J. C., Sherman, D. G., Funakoshi, Y., Ishibashi, H. 2006; 251 (1-2): 50-56

Abstract

Arundic acid (AA; ONO-2506), a novel modulator of astrocyte activation, may improve neuronal survival after stroke. We conducted a multicenter, dose-escalating, randomized, double-blind Phase I trial of AA in acute ischemic stroke. Subjects were randomized to treatment with AA or placebo in sequential dose tiers of 2-12 mg/kg/h (10-16 patients/group) within 24 h of stroke onset. Study drug was infused for 1 h daily over 7 days, and follow-up terminated at 40 days. Neurological and functional outcomes were evaluated through Day 40 as exploratory endpoints. A total of 92 subjects were enrolled with no dose-related pattern of serious adverse events (AEs). Premature terminations caused by AEs occurred in four (8.2%) patients treated with AA and five (11.6%) treated with placebo. Two subjects treated with AA (4.1%) and four given placebo (9.3%) died. Exploratory efficacy analysis showed a trend toward improvement in the change from baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) in the 8 mg/kg/h AA group on Days 3 (p=0.023 vs. placebo), 7 (p=0.002), 10 (p=0.003), and 40 (p=0.018). A dose of 8 mg/kg/h AA produced a favorable trend in reduction of NIHSS that should be confirmed in a future clinical trial.

View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jns.2006.09.001

View details for Web of Science ID 000243059000009

View details for PubMedID 17095018