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Efficacy and Safety of Baricitinib in the Post-intracerebral Hemorrhage Pulmonary Injury

Efficacy and Safety of Baricitinib in the Post-intracerebral Hemorrhage Pulmonary Injury

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase 1/2

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Overview

Some patients with intracerebral hemorrhage will develop severe lung injury such as respiratory distress syndrome. Baricitinib has been approved by the FDA for severe pneumonia caused by the coronavirus, and has been used in the treatment of hospitalized patients with COVID-19. Baricitinib significantly reduced the risk of death and shortened the length of stay in COVID-19 patients. According to clinical observations, there was no significant increase in deaths or infections due to non-COVID-19 causes during recovery, nor was there a significant increase in thrombosis. Excessive inflammatory factors release can cause inflammatory storms that damage lung cells, lead to lung injury, and eventually lead to respiratory failure, respiratory distress syndrome and other conditions, endangering life safety. Studies have shown that Baricitinib can inhibit the production of excessive pro-inflammatory cytokines by lung macrophages through the JAK pathway and reduce lung injury caused by inflammatory storms. Therefore, in patients with acute stroke with lung infection or severe lung injury, short-term use of baricitinib will help to reduce lung injury and promote the recovery of neurological function, and shorten the length of hospital stay. However, there is currently a lack of effective clinical evidence of baricitinib in the treatment of lung injury after intracerebral hemorrhage, and further research is needed.

Description

The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of baricitinib in patients with pulmonary injury after intracerebral hemorrhage.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Male or female patients ≥ 18 years old;
  2. The diagnosis was non-traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage (including supratentorial deep hemorrhage, lobal hemorrhage, cerebellar hemorrhage, brainstem hemorrhage, intracerebral hemorrhage, intracerebral parenchymal hemorrhage into ventricle, subarachnoid hemorrhage), which was confirmed by CT scan.
  3. Onset of ARDS within 48 hours to 7 days after admission (as defined by Berlin) : ① Patients with moderate to severe ARDS symptoms or progressive dyspnea within 7 days (100mmHg < PaO2/FiO2≤200, PEEP≥5cmH2O); ② Hypoxemia: SpO2/FiO2≤315mmHg and SpO2≤97%, and could not be explained by acute heart failure and fluid overload; ③ Need intubation or mechanical ventilation; ④ Imaging findings (chest X-ray/chest CT) : infiltration of both lungs, cannot be completely explained by pleural effusion, lobar/whole lung atelectasis and nodule;
  4. There was no uncured pneumonia, interstitial lung disease, or chronic respiratory failure before the onset of the disease.
  5. Able and willing to sign written informed consent and comply with the requirements of the research protocol.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Patients diagnosed with severe intracerebral hemorrhage requiring surgical intervention with decompressive craniotomy or critically ill, near death;
  2. Diagnosis of aneurysm, brain tumor, arteriovenous malformation requires surgery;
  3. Recently received live or attenuated vaccine; other JAK inhibitors or other organisms are being used, or enrolled in other clinical trials;
  4. Combine the following cases that are not eligible to participate in this study: ① Severe hepatic insufficiency (ALT/AST > 5xULN); ② Moderate to severe renal insufficiency (eGFR < 60ml/min/1.73m2); ③ Undergoing hemodialysis or hemofiltration; ④ Neutrophils or lymphocytes decreased (Absolute neutrophil count < 1000/ul, absolute lymphocyte count < 200/ul); ⑤ During pregnancy or childbirth;
  5. Venous thromboembolism or risk of thrombosis;
  6. Life expectancy after enrollment ≤24h.

Study details
    Pulmonary Injury After Intracerebral Hemorrhage

NCT06548802

Tianjin Medical University General Hospital

15 October 2025

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