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ESCAPE-NEXT

Efficacy and safety of nerinetide in acute ischaemic stroke in patients undergoing endovascular thrombectomy without previous thrombolysis (ESCAPE-NEXT): a multicentre, double-blind, randomised controlled trial

Year of Publication: 2025

Authors: Michael D Hill, Mayank Goyal, Andrew M Demchuk, ..., Patrick Wilson

Journal: The Lancet

Citation: Hill MD, Goyal M, Demchuk AM, et al. Efficacy and safety of nerinetide in acute ischaemic stroke in patients undergoing endovascular thrombectomy without previous thrombolysis (ESCAPE-NEXT): a multicentre, double-blind, randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2025;405(10478):560-570.

Link: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(25)00194-1


Clinical Question

Does nerinetide improve functional outcomes in patients with large vessel occlusion stroke undergoing endovascular thrombectomy who have not received prior thrombolysis?

Bottom Line

Nerinetide did not improve functional independence at 90 days in thrombolytic-naïve patients undergoing thrombectomy for large vessel occlusion stroke; it cannot be recommended for this population based on current evidence, though it was safe.

Major Points

  • Nerinetide did not improve mRS 0–2 at 90 days: 45% vs 46% for placebo (OR 0.97, 95% CI 0.72–1.30, p=0.82) — the trial was neutral
  • No safety signal was identified; serious adverse events occurred equally between groups
  • The trial failed to replicate the no-alteplase stratum benefit from ESCAPE-NA1 despite being specifically designed and powered for this purpose
  • Possible explanations for the neutral result include secular improvements in thrombectomy outcomes raising the placebo response rate, enrollment of older patients with greater comorbidity burden, COVID-19 pandemic effects on patient selection, treatment at later time windows (up to 12h), and a short drug-to-reperfusion interval leaving little time for neuroprotective benefit
  • The endovascular thrombectomy setting alone is insufficient to identify the ideal neuroprotection candidate population — additional selection criteria may be needed
  • The accompanying FRONTIER trial and pooled analyses of nerinetide data are proposed as paths forward for identifying appropriate candidates for neuroprotection

Design

Study Type: Multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, single-dose trial

Randomization: 1

Blinding: Double-blind; patients and all trial personnel blinded via visually identical numbered vials

Allocation: 1:1 using real-time dynamic internet-based stratified randomised minimisation (minimal sufficient balance method); stratified by time from onset ≤4.5h vs >4.5h; minimisation balanced on age, sex, baseline NIHSS, occlusion location, imaging-to-randomisation time, ASPECTS, and site

Enrollment Period: December 6, 2020 to January 31, 2023

Follow-up Duration: 90 days

Centers: 77

Countries: Canada, USA, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, Australia, Singapore

Sample Size: 850

Analyzed: 850

Analysis: Intention-to-treat (primary); per-protocol analysis also performed; deceased patients assigned mRS 6; missing primary outcomes imputed as non-responders (mRS 5–6)

Power Calculation: Approximately 91% power to detect an 11% absolute difference in mRS 0–2 (assuming 50% placebo rate); two-sided alpha 0.05; single interim analysis with O'Brien–Fleming boundary (Z=2.67, p=0.0038); 850 patients accounting for 2% dropout

Registration: NCT04462536


Inclusion Criteria

  • Age ≥18 years
  • Acute ischemic stroke due to anterior circulation large vessel occlusion (intracranial ICA, M1, or M2 of MCA)
  • Symptom onset (last-seen-well) within 12 hours of randomisation
  • Baseline NIHSS score >5 (disabling stroke at time of randomisation)
  • Pre-stroke Barthel Index >90 (functionally independent in community)
  • ASPECTS 5–10 (small to moderate ischemic core on non-contrast CT)
  • Moderate to good collateral circulation (≥50% MCA pial arterial filling on multiphase CTA; or adequate perfusion imaging equivalent)
  • Selected to undergo endovascular thrombectomy
  • NOT treated with any plasminogen activator (thrombolytic) before or concurrently
  • M2-segment occlusion required baseline NIHSS >10

Exclusion Criteria

  • Treating physician determination that thrombolytic therapy was indicated based on current treatment guidelines and medical evidence

Arms

FieldControlNerinetide
N396454
InterventionSaline placebo IV infusion over 10 minutes (single dose), administered before end of endovascular thrombectomyNerinetide 2.6 mg/kg IV (maximum 270 mg) infused over 10 minutes as a single dose, based on estimated or actual weight, administered before end of endovascular thrombectomy via dedicated IV line
DurationSingle dose; all patients followed to 90 daysSingle dose; all patients followed to 90 days

Outcomes

OutcomeTypeControlInterventionHR / OR / RRP-value
Favourable functional outcome defined as modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score 0–2 at 90 days from randomisation, assessed in person or by telephone by certified personnelPrimary181/396 (46%) achieved mRS 0–2206/454 (45%) achieved mRS 0–20.970.82
Mortality at 90 days — hierarchical testing stopped at non-significant primary outcome; result considered exploratorySecondary
Worsening of stroke (progression, symptomatic ICH causing ≥4-point NIHSS increase or life-threatening intervention, or death within 21 days) — exploratorySecondary
Shift analysis of full mRS distribution using proportional odds model — exploratorySecondary
Excellent neurological outcome (NIHSS 0–2 at 90 days) — exploratorySecondary
Infarct volume on 24-hour CT or MRI brain — tertiary/exploratory outcomeSecondary
All serious adverse events: occurred equally between nerinetide and placebo groups — no safety signal identifiedSafety
Mortality: no excess mortality in nerinetide group (exact figures not available in source excerpt)Safety
Equal between groups; exact counts not available in source textAdverse

Subgroup Analysis

Prespecified interaction between treatment and time from onset (≤4.5h vs >4.5h) was tested using a multiplicative interaction term; the interaction was non-significant and the term was excluded from the final model


Criticisms

  • The patient population may have been suboptimal for neuroprotective benefit: older patients with greater comorbidity burden and a higher proportion enrolled in later time windows (up to 12h) compared to ESCAPE-NA1
  • COVID-19 pandemic likely affected patient selection and care pathways during enrollment (Dec 2020–Jan 2023), potentially altering baseline characteristics
  • Secular improvements in thrombectomy care between ESCAPE-NA1 and ESCAPE-NEXT may have increased placebo response rates, reducing detectable treatment effect
  • Short time from drug administration to reperfusion may have left insufficient ischemic exposure time for nerinetide's temporising mechanism to confer benefit
  • No screening logs were kept, precluding assessment of selection bias or generalisability
  • The asymmetric arm sizes (454 nerinetide vs 396 placebo) despite intended 1:1 allocation may reflect the dynamic minimisation algorithm; the paper does not explicitly explain this discrepancy
  • The 12-hour enrollment window is broader than the primate models of efficacy, which did not test extended ischemic durations

Funding

Canadian Institutes for Health Research and NoNO (Toronto, ON, Canada); statistical analysis funded by NoNO via independent external consulting group

Based on: ESCAPE-NEXT (The Lancet, 2025)

Authors: Michael D Hill, Mayank Goyal, Andrew M Demchuk, ..., Patrick Wilson

Citation: Hill MD, Goyal M, Demchuk AM, et al. Efficacy and safety of nerinetide in acute ischaemic stroke in patients undergoing endovascular thrombectomy without previous thrombolysis (ESCAPE-NEXT): a multicentre, double-blind, randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2025;405(10478):560-570.

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