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  3. Early minimally invasive image-guided endoscopic evacuation of intracerebral hemorrhage (EMINENT-ICH): a randomized controlled trial.
 

Early minimally invasive image-guided endoscopic evacuation of intracerebral hemorrhage (EMINENT-ICH): a randomized controlled trial.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/84812
Date of Publication
October 18, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Clinic of Neurosurger...

Author
Hallenberger, Tim Jonas
Fischer, Urs
Bonati, Leo Hermann
Dutilh, Gilles
Mucklow, Rosine
Vogt, Andrea Sarti
Boeni-Eckstein, Claudia
Cardia, Andrea
Schubert, Gerrit A
Bijlenga, Phillipe
Messerer, Mahmoud
Raabe, Andreas
Clinic of Neurosurgery
Akeret, Kevin
Zweifel, Christian
Kuhle, Jens
Alfieri, Alex
Fournier, Jean-Yves
Fandino, Javier
Hostettler, Isabel Charlotte
Schneider, Ulf Christoph
Guzman, Raphael
Soleman, Jehuda
Series
Trials
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1745-6215
Publisher
BioMed Central
Language
en
Publisher DOI
10.1186/s13063-024-08534-7
PubMed ID
39425219
Uncontrolled Keywords

Bayesian design

Endoscopic surgery

Functional outcome

Intracerebral hemorrh...

Minimally invasive su...

Patient reported outc...

Study protocol

Description
Background
Spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage is the deadliest form of stroke with mortality rates over 50%. Currently, no sufficiently effective treatment to improve both mortality and functional outcome rates exists. However, it seems that minimally invasive surgery, especially endoscopic surgery, might be beneficial in improving survival and functional outcome rates, yet large confirmatory studies thereof are lacking. The aim of this trial is to compare whether early minimally invasive endoscopic surgery leads to improved functional outcome rates compared to the best medical treatment.Methods
This is a prospective, parallel-arm, outcome assessor blinded multicenter trial across Switzerland. Endoscopic surgery will be compared to the best medical treatment in a 1:1 randomization over a total time of 12 months. The primary outcome is defined as improved functional outcome (mRS < 3) after 6 months; secondary outcomes include mortality and morbidity rates as well as patient reported outcomes and the temporal evolution of serum biomarkers for brain damage.Discussion
Currently, large, randomized trials assessing the role and potential effect of early endoscopic surgery in intracerebral hemorrhage are lacking. Potential practical and methodological issues faced in this trial are patient enrollment, adherence to the hematoma evacuation technique used, potential patient cross-over, and the adaptive Bayesian statistical design. Nonetheless, this trial would be among the first to research the effects of early minimally invasive endoscopic surgery for SSICH and can provide class I evidence for future treatment options in intracerebral hemorrhage.Trial Registration
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05681988. Registered on January 3, 2023.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/194869
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s13063-024-08534-7.pdftextAdobe PDF1.51 MBAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)publishedOpen
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