UCLA RESEARCH ALERT
 
FINDINGS:
The results of a major, multicenter clinical trial to determine the best treatment for younger patients who have strokes that are potentially due to a hole in the upper chambers of the heart has provided suggestive but not definitive evidence of the benefit of a new heart hole–closure device.
 
The trial sought to determine which was the best treatment to prevent further strokes: a combination of closing the hole with a "button" device and anti-clotting medicines, or anti-clotting medicines alone. UCLA was one of the 69 performance sites for the study, called the Recurrent Stroke Comparing PFO Closure to Established Current Standard of Care Treatment (RESPECT).
 
Over eight years, the study enrolled 980 patients between the ages of 18 and 60 (average age 46). All had experienced a stroke of unknown origin and had a hole in the wall of their heart known as a patent foramen ovaleor, or PFO. Nearly half had large strokes as their qualifying stroke event. In up to 10 percent of strokes in the U.S., a PFO is the only identified potential cause.
 
Patients were followed for an average of two-and-a-half years. In the main analysis, patients assigned to receive the button device showed a trend toward having fewer recurrent strokes than those receiving standard care with anti-clotting medications (9 percent versus 16 percent), but the difference did not meet statistical tests for being definite. Further analyses conducted in the subset of patients who adhered to their assigned treatments provided additional evidence that the device was beneficial.
 
IMPACT:
Closure-device therapy may be a useful strategy for selected patients with a history of cryptogenic stroke and PFO —a population that is generally younger than the average stroke patient and otherwise facing a lifetime of potentially riskier medications, the UCLA researchers said. The authors said that closing the hole in the heart has also been studied as possibly helping with other health issues, such as migraines.
 
UCLA INVESTIGATORS:
Dr. Jeffrey Saver, director of the UCLA Stroke Center and a professor of neurology, was one of four national principal investigators of the study. Dr. Jonathan Tobis, director of interventional cardiology and professor of medicine at UCLA, was the RESPECT lead cardiology investigator at the UCLA site.
 
AUTHORS:
Dr. Jeffrey Saver was an author on the paper.
 
JOURNAL:
The studying findings are published in the March 21 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
 
FUNDING:
Funding for the study was provided by St. Jude Medical in St. Paul, Minn., maker of the "button" closing device.