Surgical trial in traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage (STITCH(Trauma)): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

被引:21
|
作者
Gregson, Barbara A. [1 ]
Rowan, Elise N. [1 ]
Mitchell, Patrick M. [1 ]
Unterberg, Andy [2 ]
McColl, Elaine M. [3 ]
Chambers, Iain R. [4 ]
McNamee, Paul [5 ]
Mendelow, A. David [1 ]
机构
[1] Newcastle Univ, Neurosurg Trials Unit, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE2 4AE, Tyne & Wear, England
[2] Heidelberg Univ, Dept Neurosurg, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany
[3] Newcastle CTU, Sch Med, Inst Hlth & Soc, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE2 4HH, Tyne & Wear, England
[4] James Cook Univ Hosp, Middlesbrough TS4 3BW, Cleveland, England
[5] Univ Aberdeen, Hlth Econ Res Unit, Inst Appl Hlth Sci, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, Scotland
关键词
Head injury; Traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage; Hematoma; Early surgery; HEMATOMAS; SURGERY;
D O I
10.1186/1745-6215-13-193
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Background: Intracranial hemorrhage occurs in over 60% of severe head injuries in one of three types: extradural (EDH); subdural (SDH); and intraparenchymal (TICH). Prompt surgical removal of significant SDH and EDH is established and widely accepted. However, TICH is more common and is found in more than 40% of severe head injuries. It is associated with a worse outcome but the role for surgical removal remains undefined. Surgical practice in the treatment of TICHs differs widely around the world. The aim of early surgery in TICH removal is to prevent secondary brain injury. There have been trials of surgery for spontaneous ICH (including the STICH II trial), but none so far of surgery for TICH. Methods/Design: The UK National Institutes of Health Research has funded STITCH(Trauma) to determine whether a policy of early surgery in patients with TICH improves outcome compared to a policy of initial conservative treatment. It will include a health economics component and carry out a subgroup analysis of patients undergoing invasive monitoring. This is an international multicenter pragmatic randomized controlled trial. Patients are eligible if: they are within 48 h of injury; they have evidence of TICH on CT scan with a confluent volume of attenuation significantly raised above that of the background white and grey matter that has a total volume >10 mL; and their treating neurosurgeon is in equipoise. Patients will be ineligible if they have: a significant surface hematoma (EDH or SDH) requiring surgery; a hemorrhage/contusion located in the cerebellum; three or more separate hematomas fulfilling inclusion criteria; or severe pre-existing physical or mental disability or severe co-morbidity which would lead to poor outcome even if the patient made a full recovery from the head injury. Patients will be randomized via an independent service. Patients randomized to surgery receive surgery within 12 h. Both groups will be monitored according to standard neurosurgical practice. All patients have a CT scan at 5 days (+/-2 days) to assess changes in hematoma size. Follow-up is by postal questionnaire at 6 and 12 months. The recruitment target is 840 patients.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Study protocol for a multicenter randomized controlled trial to compare radiofrequency ablation with surgical resection for treatment of pancreatic insulinoma
    Crino, Stefano Francesco
    Partelli, Stefano
    Napoleon, Bertrand
    Bellocchi, Maria Cristina Conti
    Facciorusso, Antonio
    Salvia, Roberto
    Forti, Edoardo
    Cintolo, Marcello
    Mazzola, Michele
    Ferrari, Giovanni
    Carrara, Silvia
    Repici, Alessandro
    Zerbi, Alessandro
    Lania, Andrea
    Tacelli, Matteo
    Arcidiacono, Paolo Giorgio
    Falconi, Massimo
    Larghi, Alberto
    Rizzatti, Gianenrico
    Alfieri, Sergio
    Panzuto, Francesco
    Hindryckx, Pieter
    Berrevoet, Frederik
    Lapauw, Bruno
    Lakhtakia, Sundeep
    Sundaram, Sridhar
    Samanta, Jayanta
    Rastogi, Ashu
    Landoni, Luca
    DIGESTIVE AND LIVER DISEASE, 2023, 55 (09) : 1187 - 1193
  • [42] Trial of Early Minimally Invasive Removal of Intracerebral Hemorrhage
    Pradilla, Gustavo
    Ratcliff, Jonathan J.
    Hall, Alex J.
    Saville, Benjamin R.
    Allen, Jason W.
    Paulon, Giorgio
    McGlothlin, Anna
    Lewis, Roger J.
    Fitzgerald, Mark
    Caveney, Angela F.
    Li, Xiao T.
    Bain, Mark
    Gomes, Joao
    Jankowitz, Brain
    Zenonos, Georgios
    Molyneaux, Bradley J.
    Davies, Jason
    Siddiqui, Adnan
    Chicoine, Michael R.
    Keyrouz, Salah G.
    Grossberg, Jonathan A.
    Shah, Mitesh V.
    Singh, Ranjeet
    Bohnstedt, Bradley N.
    Frankel, Michael
    Wright, David W.
    Barrow, Daniel L.
    NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2024, 390 (14) : 1277 - 1289
  • [43] Pancreatitis of biliary origin, optimal timing of cholecystectomy (PONCHO trial): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
    Bouwense, Stefan A.
    Besselink, Marc G.
    van Brunschot, Sandra
    Bakker, Olaf J.
    van Santvoort, Hjalmar C.
    Schepers, Nicolien J.
    Boermeester, Marja A.
    Bollen, Thomas L.
    Bosscha, Koop
    Brink, Menno A.
    Bruno, Marco J.
    Consten, Esther C.
    Dejong, Cornelis H.
    van Duijvendijk, Peter
    van Eijck, Casper H.
    Gerritsen, Jos J.
    van Goor, Harry
    Heisterkamp, Joos
    de Hingh, Ignace H.
    Kruyt, Philip M.
    Molenaar, I. Quintus
    Nieuwenhuijs, Vincent B.
    Rosman, Camiel
    Schaapherder, Alexander F.
    Scheepers, Joris J.
    Spanier, Marcel B. W.
    Timmer, Robin
    Weusten, Bas L.
    Witteman, Ben J.
    van Ramshorst, Bert
    Gooszen, Hein G.
    Boerma, Djamila
    TRIALS, 2012, 13
  • [44] Pancreatitis of biliary origin, optimal timing of cholecystectomy (PONCHO trial): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
    Stefan A Bouwense
    Marc G Besselink
    Sandra van Brunschot
    Olaf J Bakker
    Hjalmar C van Santvoort
    Nicolien J Schepers
    Marja A Boermeester
    Thomas L Bollen
    Koop Bosscha
    Menno A Brink
    Marco J Bruno
    Esther C Consten
    Cornelis H Dejong
    Peter van Duijvendijk
    Casper H van Eijck
    Jos J Gerritsen
    Harry van Goor
    Joos Heisterkamp
    Ignace H de Hingh
    Philip M Kruyt
    I Quintus Molenaar
    Vincent B Nieuwenhuijs
    Camiel Rosman
    Alexander F Schaapherder
    Joris J Scheepers
    Marcel BW Spanier
    Robin Timmer
    Bas L Weusten
    Ben J Witteman
    Bert van Ramshorst
    Hein G Gooszen
    Djamila Boerma
    Trials, 13
  • [45] Early Minimally Invasive Removal of Intracerebral Hemorrhage (ENRICH): Study protocol for a multi-centered two-arm randomized adaptive trial
    Ratcliff, Jonathan J. J.
    Hall, Alex J. J.
    Porto, Edoardo
    Saville, Benjamin R. R.
    Lewis, Roger J. J.
    Allen, Jason W. W.
    Frankel, Michael
    Wright, David W. W.
    Barrow, Daniel L. L.
    Pradilla, Gustavo
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY, 2023, 14
  • [46] Intracranial pressure and surgical decompression for traumatic brain injury: Biological rationale and protocol for a randomized clinical trial
    Coplin, WM
    NEUROLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2001, 23 (2-3) : 277 - 290
  • [47] Effects of propranolol on fear of dental extraction: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
    Steenen, Serge A.
    van Wijk, Arjen J.
    van Westrhenen, Roos
    de lange, Jan
    de Jongh, Ad
    TRIALS, 2015, 16
  • [48] Circular pOlyethylene drape in preVEntion of suRgical site infection (COVER trial): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
    Yoo, Ri Na
    Kim, Hyung Jin
    Lee, Jae Im
    Kang, Won-Kyung
    Kye, Bong-Hyeon
    Kim, Chang Woo
    Bae, Sung Uk
    Nam, Soomin
    Kang, Byung Mo
    BMJ OPEN, 2020, 10 (01):
  • [49] A guide to planning and executing a surgical randomized controlled trial
    Chung, Kevin C.
    Burns, Patricia B.
    JOURNAL OF HAND SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME, 2008, 33A (03): : 407 - 412
  • [50] Comparison of effectiveness of different surgical treatments for meralgia paresthetica: Results of a prospective observational study and protocol for a randomized controlled trial
    de Ruiter, Godard C. W.
    Kloet, Alfred
    CLINICAL NEUROLOGY AND NEUROSURGERY, 2015, 134 : 7 - 11