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Chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) is a common disease. The main treatment is neurosurgical evacuation and subsequent hematoma drainage. However, consensus on the optimal drain placement site, and whether the drainage should be active or passive, is lacking.
The aim of the current study is to test the hypothesis that 24 hours active subperiosteal drainage is non-inferior to 24 hours passive subdural drainage after single burr hole evacuation of a unilateral CSDH.
The study is a multicenter randomized non-inferiority trial encompassing all neurosurgical units in Denmark.
Adult patients with symptomatic CSDH admitted to a Danish neurosurgical unit for single burr hole evacuation will be screened for inclusion. Patients who are not able to give informed consent, and patients with recurrent CSDH, known cerebrospinal fluid abnormalities, and other known brain pathologies will be excluded. Patients with bilateral CSDH will be registered as one case and treated similarly on both sides.
Before surgical hematoma evacuation patients will be randomized to 24-hour passive subdural drainage or 24-hour active subperiosteal drainage.
The patients included and the two study statisticians will be blinded. The primary outcome is a composite outcome of 90-day mortality and symptomatic CSDH recurrence.
Secondary outcomes are 90-day simplified modified Rankin score (smRSq), and complications related to surgery or occurring during admission, including intracerebral hemorrhage due to misplaced drains, acute subdural hematoma, tension pneumocephalus, wound infection, drain seepage, subperiosteal hematoma, thromboembolic events, infections and seizures.
Sample size simulations of non-inferiority with a threshold of 7% increased relative risk show that a total of 354 participants will be required to demonstrate a relative risk reduction of recurrent CSDH and mortality of 30% for the cohort receiving active subperiosteal drainage given a stable power above 80% with an alpha of 5%. The study inclusion period is estimated to last 2 years.
Ethics approval for inclusion of competent patients has been obtained (N-20240009).
Full description
The incidence of symptomatic chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) is sharply on the rise due to an ageing population, and population risk factors such as alcohol misuse, falls, and use of anticoagulants and -platelets. The treatment of symptomatic CSDH is neurosurgical hematoma evacuation followed by drain placement to facilitate subsequent postoperative drainage. Accordingly, in many general neurosurgical departments this is the most common cranial procedure performed on a daily basis. However, no consensus exists on the actual surgical technique (hematoma evacuation by one burr hole, more burr holes or a larger cranial opening (craniotomy), hematoma irrigation method, drain placement site (subdural or subperiostal), and drainage method (time, active versus passive). This was also the case in Denmark where the actual CDSH evacuation technique differed vastly between departments and between neurosurgeons at the same department, although there only were four neurosurgical units in Denmark treating patients with symptomatic CSDH. Accordingly, in 2012 on the initiative of the four Danish neurosurgical departments the Danish Chronic Subdural Hematoma group (DACSUHS) was established in order to generate evidence based guidelines for the treatment of CSDH, standardize the treatment, and conduct national multicenter CSDH research. The first national CSDH treatment guideline was based on data collected retrospectively from 2010 to 2012, rigorous literature search, and a concluding Delphi process in the DACSUHS consortium, before it was finally published in 2018. It reflects the best available evidence regarding 10 aspects of CSDH management, including preoperative evaluation, surgical approach, postoperative mobilization, and use of postoperative head CT. Furthermore, it enabled the standardization of the CSDH treatment in all Danish departments by requiring the use of the same operative technique, drains, fixation technique for drains, and written patient information. The standardized CSDH approach enabled also the initiation of two larger prospective national multicenter trials evaluating the optimal postoperative drainage time in relation to CSDH recurrence rate and patient mortality. These above-mentioned process steps haves resulted in the current Danish CSDH treatment algorithm recommending evacuation of symptomatic CSDH by a single perforator made 13-mm burr hole above the maximum width of the hematoma followed by subdural temperate isotonic saline irrigation and subsequent placement of a subdural drain for 24 hours.
The subdural drain placement has, however, been much debated as drain placement through the skull burr hole in the subdural space in direct proximity to the brain may result in brain lesions, bleeding, seizures, and intracranial infections.
Therefore, burr hole craniostomy with subperiosteal drainage (also known as subgaleal drainage) has been suggested as an equally safe and effective treatment of CSDH due to less invasiveness and lower risk of drain inflicted brain parenchyma injury.
Neurosurgeons have generally been reluctant to use active (vacuum) drainage on subdural drains due to their proximity to the brain, whereas active drainage is more common active with subperiostal drainage has been more common. Although a direct comparison is lacking, it has been shown in a paper comparing three different Scandinavian centers using active subperiostal drainage, passive subdural drainage, and subdural drainage with continuously irrigation, that patients receiving passive drainage had the highest recurrence rate (20% vs. 11%) and on average a slightly higher complication rate (8.1% vs. 7.3%) and mortality rate (7.3% vs. 5.8%) compared to active subperiostal drainage which had a recurrence rate of 11.1% and a complication and mortality rate of 7.3% and 5.8%, respectively. Similarly, Post-hoc analysis of the cSDH-Drain and the TOSCAN studies have likewise revealed a higher recurrence rate (23.1% vs 14.1%) in patients receiving passive compared to active drainage.
Accordingly, as active subperiostal drainage might seem to be more safe and more efficient, the investigators find it justified to examine if 24 hours active subperiostal drainage is non-inferior to our current gold standard of 24 hours passive subdural drainage in a randomized clinical trial (the SuperDura trial).
The obtained results from the SuperDura trial will not only have major relevance for neurosurgical praxis as the investigators perform the first direct comparison between two commonly used drainage methods on a national level.
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354 participants in 2 patient groups
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Rares Miscov, MD; Carsten R Bjarkam, Professor, Ph.D., DMSc.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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