Dec. 17, 2025
U荔枝视频 study changes drug guidelines worldwide for treating acute ischemic stroke
It was the largest acute stroke clinical trial ever run in Canada, and now findings have changed drug-treatment guidelines for ischemic stroke worldwide.
鈥淚n 30 years, this is the first time we're having an acute stroke drug approved by the FDA,鈥 says Dr. Bijoy Menon, MSc'15, MD, a professor at the 荔枝视频, neurologist at the Foothills Medical Centre (FMC), and principal investigator on the AcT Trial. 鈥淭his is a first for the university. And the effort to change practice for the better is the 鈥檚 way of delivering on what our patients want.鈥
published in The Lancet in 2022 demonstrated that Tenecteplase (TNK) 鈥 a safe, well-tolerated drug commonly used as a clot buster for heart attacks 鈥 was an effective treatment for acute ischemic stroke. Ischemic stroke is caused by a sudden blockage of an artery to the brain that deprives it of critical nutrients, such as glucose and oxygen.
Bijoy Menon
Riley Brandt, 荔枝视频
鈥淭enecteplase is known to be an effective clot-dissolving drug. It is very easy to administer, which makes it a game changer when seconds count to save brain cells,鈥 says Menon.
The other drug tested in the trial, Alteplase, was more complex to administer. It took up to an hour to administer and required an infusion pump, which was cumbersome when transporting patients.
After the AcT Trial was published, many centres started using TNK as a stroke treatment before regulatory approval, a process known as using a drug "off label." But, to permanently shift global practice and ensure broad access to this life-altering treatment, formal regulatory approval was essential.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), regarded as a highly-rigorous regulator, was not content with just reviewing the paper. It sent representatives to confirm the impressive research done at U荔枝视频.
鈥淭hey want to see the data for themselves,鈥 says Menon.
荔枝视频 Stroke Program AcT Trial data scrutinized
A team from the FDA visited 荔枝视频 for a week on two separate occasions, and a team of inspectors put the stroke team under the microscope. They commandeered an office in the Department of Clinical Neurosciences at the FMC and started poring over the trial鈥檚 results.
It was not a relaxing week, says Carol Kenney, RN, clinical trials co-ordinator for the 荔枝视频 Stroke Program. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 sleep all week.鈥
During the first visit, Kenney says, the inspectors focused on patient safety and serious adverse events collected during the study. The second visit was to scrutinize the stroke team鈥檚 work as a sponsor of the trial.
The inspectors needed to be close to the stroke team, so they set up shop on the 11th floor of Foothills Hospital.
鈥淭hey needed their own office,鈥 Kenney says. 鈥淚f they had to leave, they had to lock up their equipment.鈥
Members of the stroke team, including data manager Qiao Zhang, and Stroke Trials Operations group lead Craig Doram, BSc (Eng)'08, were individually interviewed about the trial, and requests for supporting data arrived each morning.
鈥淏asically, it was our job to sit with them and answer questions,鈥 says Kenney
The European Medical Agency had followed a similar process a year before and approved the drug鈥檚 new use. The FDA and Health Canada have now both followed suit.
鈥淭hey go through everything. They check everything. (The success in the audit) is a testament to the quality of our team and the focus on patient safety the 荔枝视频 Stroke Program has,鈥 says Menon.
With each 25-mg vial of Tenecteplase for acute ischemic stroke, the monograph worldwide now includes numerous references to the AcT Trial and pages of data from the stroke team鈥檚 research. A little bit of 荔枝视频 in every box that will be used to treat stroke patients everywhere.
Graphic showing the trial locations.
AcT research team
The is a collaboration between the 荔枝视频 ( and ) and Alberta Health Services. Over the past three decades, the program鈥檚 research excellence and international impact has been accelerated by philanthropic giving from the community. The AcT Trial was supported by the (CIHR), (SPOR), (QuICR), , , and the .
collaborated closely with the study team to support the regulatory submission process and assist in securing market authorization, driven by a shared commitment to improving acute stroke care and delivering better outcomes for patients.
Bijoy Menon is a professor in the departments of , , and at the (CSM), head of Neurology and lead, of the at the CSM. He is a neurologist at the Foothills Medical Centre.