Tenecteplase for thrombolysis in stroke patients: Systematic review with meta-analysis.
adult patients with acute ischemic stroke undergoing thrombolysis
tenecteplase
alteplase
functional status at 3 months, recanalization, early neurological improvement (ENI), cerebral haemorrhage (ICH), symptomatic ICH, mortality
Abstract
Alteplase is an approved treatment for acute ischemic stroke. Tenecteplase is a genetically modified form of alteplase, with lower cost and a more favourable pharmacokinetic profile allowing bolus injection. The aim of this study was to compare both drugs in adult patients with acute ischemic stroke undergoing thrombolysis. PubMed and CENTRAL were searched for observational and experimental studies comparing both drugs in the population of interest. Additional studies were sought in clinical trial registries and by means of reference check. The efficacy outcomes of interest were functional status at 3 months, recanalization and early neurological improvement (ENI). The safety outcomes of interest were cerebral haemorrhage (ICH), symptomatic ICH and mortality. The effect measure of interest was the absolute risk difference (ARD). Effect measures for each outcome were pooled across studies using random effect models. Eight studies were included, involving 2031 patients. Overall, there were no differences in terms of good or excellent functional outcome (ARR = 0.07 and 0.03 respectively, p > 0.05 for both comparisons) but tenecteplase patients showed higher rates of recanalization (ARD = 0.11, 95% CI [0.01;0.20]) and ENI (ARD = 0.10, 95% CI [0.02;0.17]). There were no differences between groups in terms of ICH (ARD = -0.02, 95% CI [-0.06;0.01]), symptomatic ICH (ARD = 0.00, 95% CI [-0.01;0.02]) or death (ARD = 0.00, 95% CI [-0.03;0.03]). Tenecteplase is an alternative to alteplase for stroke thrombolysis, with lower cost and a more favourable pharmacokinetic profile.
