Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Stroke; a journal of cerebral circulation
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rapid and complete recanalization is a primary goal in the endovascular treatment of large vessel occlusion stroke. The effectiveness and safety of super large bore aspiration catheters (0.088″ inner diameter) for the treatment of large vessel occlusion stroke have not been demonstrated in a randomized trial.
METHODS: SUMMIT MAX (A Prospective, Randomized, Controlled, Interventional Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Safety and Effectiveness of the Route 92 Medical MonoPoint Reperfusion System for Aspiration Embolectomy in Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients) was a prospective, randomized, controlled, open-label clinical trial of patients with internal carotid artery and middle cerebral artery M1 occlusions, comparing the super large bore HiPoint Reperfusion system (Route 92 Medical) to the Vecta Aspiration system (Stryker Neurovascular). We hypothesized that the effectiveness and safety of the HiPoint reperfusion system were noninferior (12.5% noninferiority margin) to the Vecta Aspiration system. The primary effectiveness end point was successful reperfusion, defined as modified Treatment in Cerebral Infarction≥2b as adjudicated by an independent core lab, using only the assigned study device, with any use of a nonstudy device before or after the use of study device defined as failure. The primary safety end point was symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage within 24 hours (-8/+24) post-procedure.
RESULTS: There were 250 patients enrolled of whom 166 met the criteria for the modified intent-to-treat population: 89 in HiPoint and 77 in Vecta. The median age was 69 years; 54.2% were female. Successful reperfusion with any adjunctive therapy counted as a failure was 77.5% (69/89) in the HiPoint group versus 50.6% (39/77) in the Vecta group (
CONCLUSIONS: In this randomized trial of patients with anterior large vessel occlusion, the super large bore HiPoint system was noninferior to the Vecta system in achieving successful reperfusion, with a similar safety profile. This study supports the super large bore HiPoint system for mechanical thrombectomy.
REGISTRATION: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT05018650.
First Page
1980
Last Page
1990
DOI
10.1161/STROKEAHA.125.051742
Publication Date
8-1-2025
Recommended Citation
Nguyen TN, Dabus G, McGuinness B, Caldwell J, Priest R, Rai AT, Zaidat OO, Gross BA, Hanel R, Lee S, Hussain S, Shaikh H, Abdalkader M, Budzik R, Kilburg C, Woodward K, Colasurdo M, Liu J, Yoo AJ, Khandelwal P, Boo S, Vu P, Lin E, Almajali M, Singh J, Al-Bayati A, Lang MJ, Abraham M, Hassan AE, Pema P, Martin C, Grandhi R, Tonetti DA, Hixson HR, Aghaebrahim A, Sauvageau E, Ortega-Gutierrez S, Yavagal DR, Cheng-Ching E, Khalife J, Linfante I, Vulkanov V, Soomro J, Fifi JT, Maidan L, Copelan A, Schirmer CM, Bain M, Toth G, Jayaraman M, Novakovic-White R, Satti S, Villelli N, Jabbour P, Page M, McAllister DJ, Araujo Contreras R, Samaniego EA, Liebeskind DS, Hetts SW, Nogueira RG, English J, Puri AS. SUMMIT MAX: A Randomized Trial of the Super Large Bore HiPoint Reperfusion System Versus Vecta System for Aspiration Thrombectomy. Stroke. 2025 Aug;56(8):1980-1990. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.125.051742. Epub 2025 May 21. PMID: 40395106.