- Assayag, Einor Ben;
- Molad, Jeremy;
- Seyman, Estelle;
- Rotschild, Ofer;
- Zeltzer, Ehud;
- Sadeh-Gonik, Udi;
- Bregman, Noa;
- Alpernas, Aviva;
- Segal, Yahel;
- Bashat, Dafna Ben;
- Nathan, Talya;
- Hawwari, Muhamad;
- Tene, Oren;
- Hallevi, Hen
Background
Current evidence suggest that 25%-33% of stroke-survivors develop post-stroke cognitive impairment (PSCI). The licensed drug Maraviroc, a CCR5-antagonist, is postulated to act via a neuroprotective mechanism that may offer the potential of preventing progression to vascular dementia. Our hypothesis: Maraviroc may have the potential to augment learning skills and cognitive performance by affecting synaptic plasticity, along with neuro-inflammatory modulation in patients with cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) and PSCI.Design
MARCH is a multi-center, double-blind randomized-control Phase-II trial of Maraviroc 150 or 600 mg/day versus placebo for 12-months in five stroke centers in Israel. Included are patients diagnosed with recent (1-24 months) subcortical stroke who experience mild PSCI and have evidence of white matter lesions and SVD on neuroimaging.Outcomes
Primary outcomes: 1. Change in cognitive scores. 2. Drug related adverse events. Secondary outcomes: change in functional and affective scores, MRI-derived measures, inflammatory markers, carotid atherosclerosis, cerebrospinal-fluid biomarkers in a sub-study. A sample size of 60 in each treatment group and 30 in the placebo group (total - 150 participants) provides 80% power between the treatment and the placebo groups.Conclusions
The results of this work could lead to a novel, readily available, therapeutic avenue to reduce PSCI, and possibly other pathologies. This study will test safety and effectiveness of Maraviroc in limiting cognitive deterioration and/or post stroke cognitive impairment in patients with cerebral small vessel disease.Schedule
First-patient first-visit was May 2021. Recruitment to complete in 2023, follow-up to complete in 2024.