Table of Contents
- Trial overview
- Who is being studied
- Study design and treatment groups
- What the trial measures
- Trial status and size
Trial overview
The available clinical trial data show one interventional study of SOVATELTIDE in people with acute cerebral ischemic stroke.[1] The study is designed to assess both safety and efficacy, which means the researchers want to see whether the treatment can help recovery and how well it performs in the study setting.[1]
Who is being studied
The target condition is acute cerebral ischemic stroke, a sudden stroke caused by blocked blood flow to the brain.[1] The trial data do not provide more detailed eligibility rules, so the main population described is patients with this condition.[1]
Study design and treatment groups
This study is a Phase 3 trial, which is a later-stage study that usually tests how well a treatment works in a larger group of people.[1] Participants are assigned to receive either SOVATELTIDE or a matching placebo, so the researchers can compare outcomes between the two groups.[1]
The trial lists SOVATELTIDE as an intravenous treatment at 0.9 µg/Kg, and the comparison arm uses a matching placebo.[1] An intravenous treatment is given through a vein.[1]
What the trial measures
The main endpoint, also called the primary efficacy endpoint, is the proportion of patients with a good functional outcome on day 90 after randomization.[1] A good functional outcome is defined as a modified Rankin Scale score of 0 to 2.[1]
The modified Rankin Scale (mRS) is a stroke recovery scale used to measure disability and independence in daily life.[1] In this study, lower scores mean better recovery, and a score of 0 to 2 is considered a favorable result.[1]
Trial status and size
The trial status is listed as Authorised.[1] The planned enrollment is 452 participants, which gives the study enough size to compare recovery results across the groups.[1]
Only one clinical trial is provided in the source data, so the article focuses on this single Phase 3 study of SOVATELTIDE in acute cerebral ischemic stroke.[1]



