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Assessment of InfraScanner 2000™ in Detecting Subdural and Epidural Hematomas

Duke University logo

Duke University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Head Trauma
Head Injuries
Head Injuries, Multiple
Head Trauma,Closed
Head Trauma Injury
Head Trauma, Penetrating
Injuries, Head
Head Injury, Open
Multiple Head Injury
Trauma, Head
Crushing Skull Injury
Head Injuries, Closed
Craniocerebral Injuries
Head Injury Major
Head Injury, Minor
Injuries, Craniocerebral

Treatments

Device: InfraScanner 2000™

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03353246
Pro00087011

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this study is to determine the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of the a portable near-infrared-based device (portable NIR-based device), the InfraScanner 2000™, to detect intracranial hematomas (epidural hematomas (EDH) and/or subdural hematomas (SDH)) in patients hospitalized at Duke University Hospital (DUH) who have sustained or who are suspected to have sustained head trauma and have consequently received a brain computed tomography (CT) scan(s).

Full description

When applicable (conscious patient and/or family or legally authorized representative is present) the study will be introduced to the patient and relevant parties prior to the research team approaching the patient. While head trauma frequently results in impaired cognition and/or consciousness, and due to the urgency of these circumstances patients are often not accompanied by kin, whenever appropriate, the purpose of the research and the procedure will be explained in detail with all questions answered to the patient's and/or representative's satisfaction. Because patients who sustain head trauma injuries typically remain within the hospital for multiple days for monitoring and care, each participant may undergo multiple CT scans over the course of his or her hospitalization, affording the opportunity to one to numerous measurements from each patient during his or her hospital stay.

Within 30 minutes following each CT scan, the study team will approach the patient to scan the patient's cranium with the InfraScanner 2000™ (Image A). The procedure will entail placing 8 plastic light guides upon the patient's scalp. The study team member will use the device to sequentially emit light through each of the 8 light guides so that the light is incident upon scalp (Image B). The device is engineered such that the light emitter and receiver are spaced ~4cm apart, allowing the light's intensity to be measured between adjacent light guides (Image C). This entire procedure, including greeting the patient, placing the light guides, gathering the data, and removing the light guides should take ~10 minutes each time. The number of CT scans the patient receives determines the number of potential data collections. The patient will be approached by the study team following each CT scan to be scanned with the InfraScanner 2000™ (20). The patient and/or representative may refuse a scan during any encounter, and as such, the scan will not be done. For each patient scanned with the InfraScanner 2000™ they will be de-identified with a subject number, with age, sex, gender, skin color, hair color, hair thickness, mechanism of injury, Glasgow Coma Scale score, and mean time elapsed between CT scan and near-infrared measurement. These data will be stored in de-identified form on Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) and/or Microsoft Excel 2016 on a secured DHTS server (S:\NSU_IRB\Pro00087011).

The collection period for each research subject concludes 30-days following his or her initial measurement with the InfraScanner 2000™, patient discharge, or patient death.

Enrollment

500 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Any patient who presents to Duke University Hospital with suspected head trauma and receives a brain CT scan will be considered for this study.

Exclusion criteria

  • None

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

500 participants in 1 patient group

InfraScanner 2000™
Experimental group
Description:
All patients entered onto the trial will undergo at least one cranial scanning using the InfraScanner 2000™ within 30 minutes of CT. Patients will be scanned using the InfraScanner 2000™ within 30 minutes of each subsequent CT. Patients will know the results of the CT but not the InfraScanner 2000™. The standard for comparison will be determined as follows. A CT result that is positive for hematoma will be considered a true positive and a CT result that is negative for hematoma will be considered a true negative. In cases where the results of the CT are negative for hematoma and the results of the InfraScanner 2000™ are positive consideration of further follow-up will be given on a case-by-case basis.
Treatment:
Device: InfraScanner 2000™

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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