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Spreading Depolarizations in Traumatic Brain Injury

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University of Cincinnati

Status

Completed

Conditions

Traumatic Brain Injury

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT03379220
Hartings SD-II

Details and patient eligibility

About

This research aims to extend the application of spreading depolarization monitoring to non-surgical TBI patients, using intraparenchymal electrode arrays and scalp electroencephalography to detect depolarizations and develop less invasive monitoring methods.

Full description

This study aims to develop the new clinical science of spreading depolarizations for routine monitoring of all TBI patients requiring intensive care. This will be accomplished by investigating automated and non-invasive methods for bedside detection of spreading depolarizations and by determining the prognostic value of such monitoring across the spectrum of TBI severity. While current monitoring of depolarizations is invasive and limited to the subgroup of TBI patients requiring craniotomy, pilot studies have shown that spreading depolarizations are also manifested in non-invasive scalp electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings. Here, approximately 189 subjects will undergo neuromonitoring with EEG only (n=63), with combined EEG and intraparenchymal ECoG (n=63), or with combined EEG and subdural ECoG (n=63). Simultaneous ECoG and EEG monitoring will allow characterization of the EEG signatures of spreading depolarizations and enable identification of signal-processing steps and quantitative criteria for their detection with clinically meaningful sensitivity and specificity, as validated against the gold standard of invasive ECoG. In parallel, an observational electrophysiology study of all TBI patients admitted to intensive care, including non-surgical cases, will characterize the incidence of spreading depolarizations across the TBI severity spectrum. Successful completion of these objectives will 1) determine the extent to which findings obtained in surgical TBI patients also generalize to patients who are managed medically, and 2) establish the first non-invasive method for routine bedside monitoring of a neuronal pathomechanism with proven relevance to TBI outcome. In doing so, this study may enable an individualized approach to TBI management and clinical trials in which neuroprotective therapies can be administered selectively to patients based on real-time identification of a marker and mechanism of secondary neuronal injury.

Enrollment

147 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Enrollment in TRACK-TBI CA cohort
  2. Admission to intensive care
  3. Documented TBI <24 hr before anticipated placement of electrodes
  4. Lobe of primary injury accessible for ECoG by burr hole or craniotomy access
  5. Age ≥ 18 years
  6. Acute brain CT for clinical care
  7. Visual acuity/hearing adequate for testing
  8. Fluency in English or Spanish
  9. Ability to obtain informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  1. Significant polytrauma that would confound outcome assessment
  2. Prisoners or patients in custody
  3. Pregnancy
  4. Patients on psychiatric hold
  5. Major debilitating baseline mental health disorder that would interfere with follow-up and the validity of outcome
  6. Major debilitating neurological disease impairing baseline awareness, cognition, or validity of follow-up and outcome assessment
  7. Significant history of pre-existing conditions that would interfere with follow-up and outcome assessment
  8. Low likelihood of follow-up
  9. Current participation in an interventional trial
  10. Penetrating TBI
  11. Spinal cord injury with ASIA score of C or worse
  12. Bilateral unreactive pupils or other evidence of unsurvivable injury
  13. Evidence of coagulopathy (INR>1.5 or thrombocytopenia) or infection, which contraindicate invasive monitoring

Trial design

147 participants in 3 patient groups

Subdural ECoG (Group 1)
Description:
For patients who require craniotomy to treat TBI, a subdural electrode strip will be placed intraoperatively following evacuation of a hematoma or contusion, as required. Electrode strips will be used for subsequent electrocorticography (ECoG) during intensive care. Patients will also undergo continuous scalp EEG monitoring.
Burr Hole ECoG (Group 2)
Description:
For patients who do not require surgery but do require invasive monitoring, an intraparenchymal ECoG electrode array will be placed through a cranial burr hole. Depending on other monitoring needs, the location of injuries, and other clinical considerations, the burr hole may be the same as used for placement of other probes or may be separate. In cases of focal injury, the burr hole will be placed to allow electrode targeting to a lobe with significant primary lesion(s). Patients will also undergo continuous scalp EEG monitoring.
EEG (Groups 1-3)
Description:
Continuous EEG recordings will be made using Ag/AgCl electrodes placed on or beneath the scalp (subdermal wire) according to standard practice. The default montage will employ eight lead electrodes for each hemisphere following the 10/20 system (Right: Fp2, F4, C4, P4, O2, F8, T4, T6; left: Fp1, F3, C3, P3, O1, F7, T3, T5). Other montages with more dense placement of electrodes in the region of ECoG monitoring may also be used.

Trial contacts and locations

7

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Central trial contact

Jed Hartings, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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