| Literature DB >> 27927658 |
Shane W English1,2, D Fergusson2,3, M Chassé4,5, A F Turgeon6,7, F Lauzier6,7,8, D Griesdale9, A Algird10, A Kramer11,12, A Tinmouth2,3, C Lum2, J Sinclair2, S Marshall2,3, D Dowlatshahi2,3, A Boutin7, G Pagliarello2, L A McIntyre1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Anaemia is common in aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (aSAH) and is a potential critical modifiable factor affecting secondary injury. Despite physiological evidence and management guidelines that support maintaining a higher haemoglobin level in patients with aSAH, current practice is one of a more restrictive approach to transfusion. The goal of this multicentre pilot trial is to determine the feasibility of successfully conducting a red blood cell (RBC) transfusion trial in adult patients with acute aSAH and anaemia (Hb ≤100 g/L), comparing a liberal transfusion strategy (Hb ≤100 g/L) with a restrictive strategy (Hb ≤80 g/L) on the combined rate of death and severe disability at 12 months.Entities:
Keywords: NEUROSURGERY
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27927658 PMCID: PMC5168610 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1SAHaRA trial design.
Figure 2Effect of recruitment rate on study duration: projects 5 sites with staggered initiation of enrolment.
Important baseline characteristics (from time of enrolment and randomisation) to be prospectively collected
| Factor | Variable to capture |
|---|---|
| Age at enrolment | Age in years |
| Sex | Male or female |
| History of CAD, HTN | Present or not |
| SAH clinical severity | WFNS score |
| SAH radiographic severity | Modified Fisher Scale Score |
| Hydrocephalus | Need for EVD |
| Aneurysm size and location | Size (mm), artery involved |
| Method aneurysm secured | Clip or coil or not secured |
| Presence of vasospasm | Radiographic or clinical vasospasm* |
| Presence of cerebral infarct | Cerebral infarct on prerandomisation imaging |
*Radiographic vasospasm defined as a reduction in cerebral artery diameter on digital subtraction angiography and classified as mild (0–33% reduction), moderate (34–66% reduction) or severe (67–100% reduction) or by transcranial Doppler with a mean middle or anterior cerebral artery flow velocity of >200 cm/s or an increase of >50 cm/s/24 hours on repeated measures and a Lindegaard ratio of ≥3, clinical vasospasm requires the radiographic diagnosis with clinical neurological deterioration (defined as an otherwise unexplained decrease in Glasgow Coma Scale score of ≥2 points for ≥2 hours or new focal neurological deficit).
CAD, coronary artery disease; EVD, external ventricular drain; HTN, hypertension; SAH, subarachnoid haemorrhage; WFNS, World Federation of Neurosurgeons.
Important cointerventions to be prospectively collected
| Cointervention | Variable to capture | Operationalisation |
|---|---|---|
| Vasospasm* | ||
| Vasospasm prophylaxis | Hyperdynamic therapy (prior to diagnosis of vasospasm) |
Use of vasopressors to drive a target MAP>65 mm Hg |
|
Use of intravenous fluid infusions or regular boluses over maintenance | ||
|
Use of intravenous fluids to target specific haematocrit | ||
| Magnesium (prior to diagnosis of vasospasm) |
Use of magnesium intravenous infusion | |
| Chemical vasodilators (prior to diagnosis of vasospasm) |
Use of infusion of vasodilator (intravenous) or any IA use (eg, milrinone, paperavine, CCB, etc) | |
| Vasospasm treatment | Hyperdynamic therapy (after diagnosis of vasospasm) |
Same criteria as above |
| Magnesium |
Same criteria as above | |
| Mechanical vasodilation |
Use of balloon angioplasty | |
| Chemical vasodilation |
Use of infusion of vasodilator (intravenous) or any IA use (eg, milrinone, paperavine, CCB, etc). | |
| Definitive aneurysm management (if completed postrandomisation) | Clip vs coil |
Used or not |
| Time to clip or coil |
Minutes | |
| Blood pressure management | Daily use of vasopressor |
Used or not |
| Highest daily target MAP |
mm Hg | |
| Fever/temperature regulation | fever |
Daily highest temperature |
*Radiographic vasospasm defined as a reduction in cerebral artery diameter on digital subtraction angiography and classified as mild (0–33% reduction), moderate (34–66% reduction) or severe (67–100% reduction) or by transcranial Doppler with a mean middle or anterior cerebral artery flow velocity of >200 cm/s or an increase of >50 cm/s/24 hours on repeated measures and a Lindegaard ratio of ≥3, clinical vasospasm requires the radiographic diagnosis with clinical neurological deterioration (defined as an otherwise unexplained decrease in Glasgow Coma Scale score of ≥2 points for ≥2 hours or new focal neurological deficit).
CCB, calcium channel blocker; IA, intra-arterial; IV, intravenous; MAP, mean arterial pressure.
Schedule of assessments
| Assessment | Baseline | Prospective—daily | Hospital discharge | 6 months | 12 months |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eligibility criteria | X | ||||
| Recruitment | X | ||||
| Informed consent | X | ||||
| Randomisation | X | ||||
| Baseline demographics | X | ||||
| Medical history | X | ||||
| Physical examination including BP, O2 sat, GCS | X | X | X | ||
| Baseline labs | X | ||||
| aSAH clinical grade | X | ||||
| Neuroimaging (U/S, CT, MRI, Angio…) | X | ||||
| Vasospasm monitoring (CTA, U/S, angio . . .) and management | X | X | X | ||
| Laboratory results | X | X | |||
| Transfusion requirements | X | X | |||
| Cointervention log | X | X | |||
| Adherence to treatment | X | X | |||
| AE review | X | X | |||
| Neurological outcome (mRS) | X | X | X | ||
| Functional independence measure (FIM) | X | ||||
| EuroQOL Quality of Life Scale (EQ5D) | X |
GCS, Glasgow Coma Score; U/S, ultrasound.