Awardee OrganizationMASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Description
Abstract Text
The wide availability, low cost, and multiple biochemical, molecular and hemodynamic effects of
hyperoxia make it ideally suited as a neuroprotective strategy. In animal studies, and in a recent pilot human
study, we have documented that breathing high-flow oxygen (normobaric hyperoxia therapy or NBO) during
brain ischemia confers potent neuroprotection. The benefit of NBO appears to be transient, similar to that
observed in prior hyperbaric oxygen studies. However, sustained benefit does occur if NBO-treated tissue is
reperfused. We believe that today, with enhanced reperfusion rates from newer therapies such as tPA, and
advances in MRI that allow serial assessment of tissue ischemia-reperfusion, there exists an exciting
opportunity to assess whether NBO's transient tissue-salvaging effects can be converted (via induced or
spontaneous reperfusion) into sustained benefit. By preventing early ischemic cell death, NBO may be a
feasible strategy to extend the narrow time window for IV tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) therapy.
In this proposal we aim to extend our preliminary work in a double-blind study enrolling 150 acute (<12
hours) ischemic stroke patients over 5 years. Patients will receive NBO or Room Air for 8 hours and will
undergo serial clinical examinations and diffusion-perfusion MRI (DWI/PWI). Safety and efficacy of NBO will
be determined in an 'intention to treat' statistical analysis of change in NIH stroke scale scores during and
after therapy. The potential synergistic benefit of NBO with reperfusion will be assessed. We will also
compare MRI ischemic lesion growth and hemorrhage rates, and perform novel voxel-based analyses of
DWI and PWI parameters. In year 1 we will exclude tPA-treated patients and investigate the safety of NBO
with tPA in an embolic (clot-based) rodent stroke model. If the combination appears safe in rodents, and if
the year 1 human data raises no safety concerns, we will expand to include tPA-treated patients. Finally, we
will conduct pathological and in-vivo MRI studies in rodent stroke models to investigate whether NBO can
extend the tPA time window, and to investigate NBO's effects on cerebral hemodynamics.
These studies are significant because they will comprehensively test the effects of oxygen in the ischemic
brain. Breathing high-flow oxygen may prove to be a simple, practical, portable, and potentially cost-effective
therapy that improves stroke outcomes, either independently or by extending the time window for IV tPA.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AcuteAirAlteplaseAnimalsAtmospheric PressureAttenuatedBiochemicalBlood - brain barrier anatomyBlood VolumeBrainBrain IschemiaBrain hemorrhageBreathingCell DeathCerebrumClinicalClinical TrialsCoagulation ProcessConflict (Psychology)DiffuseDiffusionDouble-Blind MethodEnrollmentFailureFree RadicalsGrowthHemorrhageHourHumanHyperbaric OxygenHyperbaric OxygenationHyperoxiaHypoxiaIncidenceInfarctionInjuryIntentionIschemiaIschemic StrokeLesionMagnetic Resonance ImagingModelingMolecularNervous System PhysiologyNeurologicOutcomeOxygenOxygen Therapy CarePatientsPerfusionPhasePhysiological reperfusionRandomizedRateReperfusion TherapyResearch PersonnelRiskRodentRodent ModelSafetyScoreStrokeTechniquesTestingTherapeuticTimeTissuesTodayUnited States National Institutes of HealthWorkacute strokebasebrain tissuecostexperiencehemodynamicshuman datahuman studyimprovedin vivoinsightischemic lesionneuroprotectionnovelpreventprograms
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
CFDA Code
853
DUNS Number
073130411
UEI
FLJ7DQKLL226
Project Start Date
07-September-2006
Project End Date
30-June-2011
Budget Start Date
01-July-2007
Budget End Date
30-June-2008
Project Funding Information for 2007
Total Funding
$424,266
Direct Costs
$242,438
Indirect Costs
$181,828
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2007
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
$424,266
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01NS051412-02
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
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