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Surgery versus conservative treatment for traumatic acute subdural haematoma: a prospective, multicentre, observational, comparative effectiveness study

Authors :
Essen, T.A. van
Lingsma, H.F.
Pisică, D.
Singh, R.D.
Volovici, V.
Boogert, H.F. den
Younsi, A.
Peppel, L.D.
Heijenbrok-Kal, M.H.
Ribbers, G.M.
Walchenbach, R.
Menon, D.K.
Hutchinson, P.
Depreitere, B.
Steyerberg, Ewout W.
Maas, A.I.
Ruiter, G.C.W. de
Peul, W.C.
Essen, T.A. van
Lingsma, H.F.
Pisică, D.
Singh, R.D.
Volovici, V.
Boogert, H.F. den
Younsi, A.
Peppel, L.D.
Heijenbrok-Kal, M.H.
Ribbers, G.M.
Walchenbach, R.
Menon, D.K.
Hutchinson, P.
Depreitere, B.
Steyerberg, Ewout W.
Maas, A.I.
Ruiter, G.C.W. de
Peul, W.C.
Source :
Lancet Neurology; 620; 631; 1474-4422; 7; 21; ~Lancet Neurology~620~631~~~1474-4422~7~21~~
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext<br />BACKGROUND: Despite being well established, acute surgery in traumatic acute subdural haematoma is based on low-grade evidence. We aimed to compare the effectiveness of a strategy preferring acute surgical evacuation with one preferring initial conservative treatment in acute subdural haematoma. METHODS: We did a prospective, observational, comparative effectiveness study using data from participants enrolled in the Collaborative European Neurotrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) cohort. We included patients with no pre-existing severe neurological disorders who presented with acute subdural haematoma within 24 h of traumatic brain injury. Using an instrumental variable analysis, we compared outcomes between centres according to treatment preference for acute subdural haematoma (acute surgical evacuation or initial conservative treatment), measured by the case-mix-adjusted percentage of acute surgery per centre. The primary endpoint was functional outcome at 6 months as rated with the Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended, which was estimated with ordinal regression as a common odds ratio (OR) and adjusted for prespecified confounders. Variation in centre preference was quantified with the median OR (MOR). CENTER-TBI is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02210221, and the Resource Identification Portal (Research Resource Identifier SCR_015582). FINDINGS: Between Dec 19, 2014 and Dec 17, 2017, 4559 patients with traumatic brain injury were enrolled in CENTER-TBI, of whom 1407 (31%) presented with acute subdural haematoma and were included in our study. Acute surgical evacuation was done in 336 (24%) patients, by craniotomy in 245 (73%) of those patients and by decompressive craniectomy in 91 (27%). Delayed decompressive craniectomy or craniotomy after initial conservative treatment (n=982) occurred in 107 (11%) patients. The percentage of patients who underwent acute surgery ranged from 5·6% to 51·5% (IQR 12·3-35·9) between centres

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Lancet Neurology; 620; 631; 1474-4422; 7; 21; ~Lancet Neurology~620~631~~~1474-4422~7~21~~
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1366844473
Document Type :
Electronic Resource