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The SWEMMA trial is an open, national, multi-center, prospective, randomized (1:1), superiority trial designed to assess impact on reoperation rates for chronic subdural hematoma with a head-to-head comparison of embolization of the middle meningeal artery (intervention) with standard neurosurgical hematoma evacuation (control).
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Introduction: Chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) is one of the most common neurosurgical disorders and the incidence is rising. The mainstay of treatment is neurosurgical hematoma evacuation followed by postoperative drainage but recurrence and reoperation rates are as high as 10-30%. Embolization of the middle meningeal artery (EMMA) has been proposed as an adjunct or as sole therapy and initial data suggests markedly reduced reoperation rates. Several randomised trials are currently underway, mostly randomizing with EMMA as an adjunctive to evacuation, or as an alternative to conservative treatment. This trial aims to make a head-to-head comparison of neurosurgical evacuation versus EMMA.
Aims: The primary objective of the trial is to compare efficacy of EMMA on rates of reoperation by randomizing patients with CSDH and mild to moderate symptoms to either EMMA or standard neurosurgical evacuation. Secondary objectives include all complication rate, technical success rate, residual hematoma volume at 3 months, neurological functionality and quality of life at 3 and 12 months and composite endpoint of death or reoperation at 3 and 12 months.
Method: Patients with previously untreated CSDH admitted to the neurosurgical unit at participating centers with clinical and/or radiological indication for neurosurgical evacuation, mild to moderate symptoms and able to provide informed consent, will be randomized to either standard treatment or EMMA. Immediately after either procedure the participant returns to standard clinical care. At 3 months a CT of the head is performed. A structured telephone interview is held by a treatment-blinded outcomes assessor at 3 months and 12 months, measuring quality of life (EQ-5D) and neurological disability (mRS). Medical records are collected and assessed at 3 months regarding safety measures. Data on reoperation and mortality are collected from the National Board of Health and Welfare and National Cause of Death Registry at 3 months and 12 months.
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288 participants in 2 patient groups
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Åke Holmberg; Johan Wassélius, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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