The efficacy and safety of the neuroprotective drug clomethiazole was tested in a double blind placebo controlled trial in patients with a clinical diagnosis of acute hemispheric stroke.
Patients ...with symptom onset of </=12 hours before the start of treatment were included in the study. Clomethiazole (75 mg/kg) or placebo was given as an intravenous infusion over a 24-hour period. Patients were followed up for 90 days. The primary efficacy variable was the proportion of patients reaching relative functional independence (>/=60 points on the Barthel Index) at 90 days.
A total of 1360 patients were included. In the main efficacy analysis (n=1353), 56.1% of patients taking clomethiazole and 54.8% of placebo patients reached relative functional independence. The difference was not statistically significant. An analysis of the effect of time since onset of symptoms showed no difference between the treatment groups. Clomethiazole was generally well tolerated and appeared safe in the population studied. Sedation was the most common adverse event, leading to treatment withdrawal that occurred in 15.6% of clomethiazole-treated patients compared with 4.2% of placebo-treated patients. In a subgroup classified before randomization as having total anterior circulation syndrome (TACS) (n=545, or 40% of all randomized patients), the percentage of those reaching relative functional independence was 40.8% on clomethiazole and 29.8% on placebo, a difference of approximately 11 percentage units. TACS patients have clinical symptoms suggesting a "large" stroke.
Clomethiazole had no adverse or beneficial effect on long-term outcome for all patients but produced sedation. The hypothesis that clomethiazole is effective in patients with large strokes will be tested in a further study.
Acute rejection is a major complication after renal transplantation and the most important risk factor for chronic rejection. We investigated whether the timing of the last treated acute rejection ...episode (ARE) influences long-term outcome and compared the risk profiles of early versus late ARE.
A cohort of 654 patients who underwent cadaveric renal transplants (1983-1997) that functioned for more than 6 months was studied. In 384 of 654 transplant recipients, one or more treated AREs were documented; the last ARE occurred in 297 of 384 transplant recipients within 3 months and in 87 of 384 after 3 months. Applying multivariate logistic regression analysis, we compared the predictor variables of the two groups with transplants without AREs.
Ten-year graft survival rates censored for causes of graft loss other than chronic rejection were 94%, 86%, and 45% for patients without ARE, with early ARE, and with late ARE, respectively. Delayed graft function, odds ratio (OR) 2.37 (1.55-3.62), and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II incompatibility, OR 2.28 (1.62-3.20) per human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR mismatch, were independent risk factors for early ARE. In contrast, recipient age, OR 0.75 (0.61-0.93) per 10-year increase, donor age, OR 1.28 (1.07-1.53) per 10-year increase, female donor gender, OR 1.74 (1.03-2.94), and MHC class I incompatibility, OR 1.35 (1.07-1.72) per mismatch of cross reactive groups, were associated with late ARE.
Late ARE has a detrimental impact on long-term graft survival and is associated with MHC class I incompatibility, whereas early ARE is correlated with HLA-DR mismatches and has a better prognosis. These data are consistent with the role of direct and indirect allorecognition in the pathophysiology of early and late ARE, respectively.