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. 2023 Jan 26;2023(1):CD012144. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012144.pub3

NCT04522102.

Study name Antiplatelet Secondary Prevention International Randomised trial after INtracerebral haemorrhaGe (ASPIRING) ‐ pilot phase
Methods Design: randomised controlled PROBE parallel group trial
Setting: multicentre hospital sites in China and Australia
Dates: September 2021 to June 2023
Participants Sample size: 120 participants
Diagnosis: ICH
Inclusion criteria
  • Patient age ≥ 18 years

  • Symptomatic stroke due to spontaneous (non‐traumatic) ICH

  • Patient is at least 24 hours after ICH symptom onset

  • Patient and their doctor are both uncertain about whether to start or avoid antiplatelet monotherapy

  • Consent to randomisation from the patient (or personal/legal/professional representative if the patient does not have mental capacity)


Exclusion criteria
  • ICH due to head injury, in the opinion of the investigator

  • ICH due to haemorrhagic transformation of an ischaemic stroke, in the opinion of the investigator

  • Patient is already taking antiplatelet therapy, or full dose anticoagulant therapy, after ICH

  • Patient is pregnant, breastfeeding, or of childbearing age and not taking contraception

  • Patient and carer unable to understand spoken or written local language

Interventions Intervention: start antiplatelet monotherapy (one antiplatelet drug available in local standard clinical practice, chosen by patient's physician pre‐randomisation)
Comparator: avoid antiplatelet therapy
Outcomes Primary outcome
  • Receipt of regulatory approvals in China, Australia and New Zealand separately, including Ethics, Human Genetics Resources Administration of China (HGRAC)


Secondary outcomes
  • Trial database structure and data flows that comply with data privacy and information governance regulations in China, Australia and New Zealand

  • Participation of 20 sites in China and 10 sites in Australia and New Zealand

  • Frequency of ICH survivors who are screened, eligible, approached, consented, and randomised by month and site from activation

  • Barriers to randomisation of eligible patients

  • Frequency of protocol deviations and violations

  • Adherence to the allocated intervention by investigators and participants

  • Frequency of withdrawal and loss to follow‐up

  • Completeness of follow‐up assessments

  • Characteristics of randomised participants compared with eligible patients who were not recruited

  • Composite of all serious vascular events (non‐fatal stroke, non‐fatal myocardial infarction or death from a vascular cause)

  • Any serious adverse event

  • Any serious adverse reaction

  • Suspected unexpected serious adverse reactions


Duration of follow‐up: up to 3 years
Starting date 3 September 2021
Contact information Rustam AI‐Shahi Salman, +44 131 242 7014, Rustam.Al-Shahi@ed.ac.uk
Lily Song, +86 13916466400, lsong@georgeinstitute.org.cn
Notes Declarations of interest: not specified in trials register
Sources of funding: not specified in trials register