Literature DB >> 31143249

The Role of Decompressive Craniectomy in Traumatic Brain Injury: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

Nida Fatima1, Ghaya Al Rumaihi1, Ashfaq Shuaib2,3, Maher Saqqur2,3.   

Abstract

The objective is to evaluate the efficacy of early decompressive craniectomy (DC) versus standard medical management ± late DC in improving clinical outcome in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Electronic databases and gray literature (unpublished articles) were searched under different MeSH terms from 1990 to present. Randomized control trials, case-control studies, and prospective cohort studies on DC in moderate and severe TBI. Clinical outcome measures included Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale (GCOS) and extended GCOS, and mortality. Data were extracted to Review Manager software. A total of 45 articles and abstracts that met the inclusion criteria were retrieved and analyzed. Ultimately, seven studies were included in our meta-analysis, which revealed that patients who had early DC had no statistically significant likelihood of having a favorable outcome at 6 months than those who had a standard medical care alone or with late DC (OR of favorable clinical outcome at 6 months: 1.00; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.75-1.34; P = 0.99). The relative risk (RR) of mortality in early DC versus the standard medical care ± late DC at discharge or 6 months is 0.62; 95% CI: 0.40-0.94; P = 0.03. Subgroup analysis based on RR of mortality shows that the rate of mortality is reduced significantly in the early DC group as compared to the late DC. RR of Mortality is 0.43; 95% CI: 0.26-0.71; P = 0.0009. However, good clinical outcome is the same. Early DC saves lives in patients with TBI. However, further clinical trials are required to prove if early DC improve clinical outcome and to define the best early time frame in performing early DC in TBI population.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clinical outcome; decompressive craniectomy; traumatic brain injury

Year:  2019        PMID: 31143249      PMCID: PMC6515989          DOI: 10.4103/ajns.AJNS_289_18

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Asian J Neurosurg


Introduction

Cerebral edema remains one of the main complications of traumatic brain injury (TBI) that lead to increase in intracranial pressure (ICP) and reduction in the cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP).[1] This would successively cause detrimental effects on the cerebral oxygen metabolism and can lead to catastrophic events.[2345] In TBI, the cerebral contusion induces the life-threatening brain swelling within the first 2–3 h. The second peak of the brain swelling occurs within 2–5 days due to blood cell breakdown products and activated inflammatory cascades.[678] As per the European Brain Injury Consortium and the American Brain Injury Consortium guidelines for severe TBI, decompressive craniectomy (DC) is one of the therapeutic options when conventional treatment fails to reduce the ICP, which involves; head elevation, sedation, analgesia, and neuromuscular paralysis.[91011121314151617] Other treatment options for treating brain edema includes ventriculostomy (if an external ventricular drain had not already been inserted for ICP monitoring), pharmacologic blood-pressure augmentation, osmotherapy, moderate hypocapnia (PaCO2, 4.0–4.5 kPa [30–34 mmHg]), and therapeutic hypothermia (not <34°C).[18] DC is a surgical technique designed to provide instantaneous and definitive relief of elevated ICP, especially when there is either unilateral or bilateral diffuse cerebral swelling, neurological deficit, dilated and unreactive pupils, failure of medical treatment with persistent ICP >30 mmHg and CPP <45 mmHg.[9101819] Although some regard it as a last-ditch effort only to be used when more conservative ICP treatment measures have failed as mentioned above. Evidence suggests that early DC may play an optimal care of patients with elevated ICP.[202122] Based on that, an urgent DC can be a life-saving procedure by providing the room for the brain to swell, thus reducing the ICP and maintaining the CPP. However, wait-and-see approach is mostly adopted before the craniectomy or craniotomy of lesions evacuation, with evidence of neurological decline or ICP elevation with or without failure of medical management.[23] Thus, the timing of DC could be very crucial regarding the surgical outcome despite being still debatable to intervene early or late as a second-tier therapy after the initial trial of medical management has failed. In most of the cases, DC is performed following the protocol of medical treatment of refractory intracranial edema and hypertension as a secondary procedure (secondary DC).[28] The timing of the DC (early vs. late) plays an important role as it may change the pathophysiological responses.[78] It has been reported that the right time of DC can be determined by the clinical follow-up, repeated head computed tomography (CT) scans, and continuous ICP and CPP monitoring.[910] The safety and efficacy of DC as an early or late procedure, following the initial conservative management in TBI, has not been fully established due to limited randomized controlled trials (RCTs), looking at the timing of DC in predicting clinical outcome and the difficulty in performing these types of trials. Further studies are required to determine the timing of the DC surgery to improve the patient's clinical outcome. Our meta-analysis is a further step to determine the efficacy of early DC versus the standard medical care ± late DC in improving the clinical outcome in TBI. Besides, to determine whether early DC versus late DC after failing the medical management of raised ICP has any role in improving the clinical outcome in TBI. Our a priori hypothesis was that early DC improves the clinical outcome of patients with moderate-to-severe TBI as compared to the standard medical care ± late DC.

Methods

Search strategy

We developed PICO question. Does the early DC versus the standard medical care ± late DC improves the clinical outcome in moderate-to-severe TBI? Based on that the following PICO question was obtained: Population: Patients with moderate-to-severe TBI Intervention: Early DC before the medical management Control: Standard medical management ± late DC Outcome: Extended Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale (GOS-E) at 6 months, GOS at 6 months. Early or primary DC was defined as DC done at the time of mass lesion evacuation, and can be performed even without taking measures to reduce the ICP[28] while late or secondary DC is defined as DC done to treat the refractory ICP, which according to some studies is >24–48 h.[28] The refractory ICP is defined as the raised ICP >25 mmHg that lasts for ≥15 min, which is not responding to the usual medical management.[1724] The intervention arm received early DC for the TBI. The control arm receives the standard medical care that involves; head elevation, sedation, analgesia, moderate hypothermia, osmotherapy (mannitol or hypertonic saline), and/or cerebrospinal fluid drainage alone or with the late DC. We applied stringent inclusion criteria, selecting only RCTs, case–control studies (CCSs) or cohort studies (CS), and patients with moderate and severe with TBI who were candidates for DC and randomized to receive either early DC or standard medical care ± late DC. Case-series and retrospective studies were excluded. We used the following MeSH headings: DC or ICP or TBI. We did not define any limitation in language. Articles published between 1990 and the present were searched. Two reviewers MS and NF completed all the review process. The following databases were reviewed: the Cochrane Library, Medline, Embase, Web of Science, Google Scholar, Scopus, and PubMed. In addition, we reviewed the following gray literature: unpublished abstracts from the American and European Neurotrauma conferences over the past 10 years.

Data extraction and management

Demographic information, detailed methods, interventions, and outcomes were abstracted from the manuscripts chosen for the review and recorded on a special data form. The data form included the following: Methods: Design, method of randomization, setting of treatment, blindness of treatment or intervention (or not), withdrawals or patients lost to follow-up, type of analysis (intention to treat analysis), and primary and secondary outcomes Population: Sample size, inclusion and exclusion criteria, age, gender, CT scan findings (based on the MARSHAL classification), time DC, time to medical management Intervention: Early DC Control: Standard medical management ± late DC Outcome: Reported poor and good long- and short-term outcomes and mortality rate. Outcome measures: several outcome measures were selected for our meta-analysis: Functional outcomes: GOS-E 0–8: outcomes were dichotomized to favorable (5–8) or poor (1–4) from 6 months to 1 year GOS at 6 months’ favorable outcome (4–5) and unfavorable outcome (1–3) Mortality defined as the number of deaths in a particular population per unit of time.

Assessment of risk of bias in included studies

To avoid publication bias, we reviewed the abstracts from the European and American TBI meetings, looking at unpublished trials.

Measures of treatment effect: Treatment efficacy was dichotomized as favorable or poor functional outcome

In order for the DC to be considered effective, we required the threshold between good and poor outcome to be clinically and statistically significant (P < 0.05).

Subgroup analysis and investigation of heterogeneity

The following subgroup analysis was performed: Subgroup analysis based on the rate of mortality at discharge or at 6 months of early DC versus medical treatment ± followed by late DC Subgroup analysis based on the rate of mortality at discharge or 6 months of early DC versus the late DC was carried out. Subgroup analysis based on the early DC versus late DC leading to favorable and unfavorable outcome was carried out The pooled meta-analysis was repeated with exclusion of the pediatric trial to measure the effect of early DC in the adult population with moderate-to-severe TBI.

Results

Description of studies

A total of 14,852 titles were reviewed from the above-mentioned electronic literature. Reviewing the gray literature did not add any abstracts. Forty-five studies were retrieved and analyzed. Seven studies (5 RCTs, 1 CCS, and 1 CS) met the inclusion criteria and included in our meta-analysis. The baseline characteristics and safety and efficacy of the RCTs, CCS, and prospective CS are summarized in Tables 1 and 2.
Table 1

Baseline characteristics of randomized control trials, case-control studies, and prospective cohort studies

Trial or studyType of study: RCT/CCS/Cohortn (treatment/control)Intervention (treatment/control)Time to craniectomy from randomizationInitial GCSICP thresholdAge (intervention/control) (mean±SD)Inclusion criteriaExclusion criteriaType of injury on the basis of CT scanOutcome measures
Wettervik et al., 2018[25]RCT609:DC: 35 thiopental/no DC group: 23No thiopental/no DC: 544Total brain infarction: 7B/L DC: 6/hemi-DC: 18 versus medical care (thiopental)N/AGCS: 1-2: 5:4:20:5N/A40:23:544:7Same as DECRA and RESCUE-ICP studySame ad DECRA and RESCUE-ICP studyDI II: 6:6:283:1DI III: 11:8:67:1DI IV: 2:1:24:1Nonevacuated: 0:0:52:3GOS-E at 6 months
Hutchinson et al., 2016[17]RESCUEicp Trial*RCT408T: 202 versus C: 198 (10 excluded)Secondary DC (unilateral FTP craniectomy or BF craniec)/medical management2.2 hGCS 1 or 2: 96/181 versus 85/170GCS 3-6: 85/181 versus 85/170>25 mmHg for 30 min to 1 h10-65 years32.3±13.2 versus 34.8±13.7Head injury requiring ICP monitoringAge 10-65 yearsAbnormal CT scanPatients may have had an immediate operation for a mass lesion but not a decompressive craniectomyBilateral fixed and dilated pupilBleeding diathesisInjury deemed to be unsurvivableDiffuse injury: 161/198 versus 141/186Mass lesion 37/198 versus 45/186Primary: GOS-E at 6 monthsSecondary outcomesGOS-E at 12 and 24 monthsQuality of life SF-36 in adults and SF-10 in children at 6, 12, and 24 monthsGCS at discharge ICP assessmentTime in ICU Time to dischargeEconomic evaluation
Mendelow et al., 2015[26](STITCH TRAUMA)RCT170 patients: 82 versus 86 (2 excluded)Early surgery versus medicaltreatmentMean 4 versus 5813-15; 709-12; 718 or less; 27>30 mmHg51 (32-63) versus 50 (33-61)TBI within 48 h of injuryNo more than 2 Intraparenchymal hemorrhages of 10 ml or moreExtradural or subdural hematoma that required surgeryThree or more separate hematomacerebellar hemorrhage/contusionSurgery could not be performed within 12 h of randomizationPreexisting physical or mental disabilityEvidence of TICH on CT scan with a confluent volume of attenuationPrimary outcome: GOS at 6 monthsSecondary outcomesGOS-E RankinEurpeon quality of life-5 dimension scale (EQ-5D) at 6 months
Cooper et al., 2011[24]DECRA Trial***RCT165: T: 73 versus C: 82BFT craniectomy versus standard care2.3 h5 versus 6>20 mmHg for 1-2 h23.7 years versus 24.6 yearsAges of 15-59 yearsSevere, nonpenetrating TBIGCS 3-8Marshal Class 3 on CT scanNot deemed suitable for full active treatment dilated, unreactive pupils, mass lesions, spinal cord injury, and cardiac arrestDiffuse injury II 17 versus 27Diffuse injury III or IV 53 versus 53Nonevacuated mass lesion VI 3 versus 2Primary outcome: GOS-E at 6 monthsSecondary outcomeICP hourlyIntracranial hypertension index Number of days in the hospital and ICU Mortality in the hospital and at 6 monthsThe proportion of survivors with a score of 2-4
Rubiano et al., 2009[27]Case-control studyT: 16C: 20Primary decompression versus secondary decompression as a second tier therapyWithin 12 h of early decompression while 24-48 h of medical managementSevere head injury GCS <925 mmHg18.3 years versus 24.3 yearsAge younger than 50 yearsGCS <9 after CPRIsolated nonpenetrating head injuryTime from injury <12 hAbsence of brain deathBrain deadCT with diffuse injury III or IV of the Marshall classificationPrimary outcomes: Mortaliy and Glasgow Coma Outcome ScaleSecondary outcomes includeLength of stayTotal hospital length of stayDischarge status
Taylor et al., 2001[28]RCT27: 14 medical versus 13 to DCStandarized management versus SM+DC19.2 h (since time of injury) 6 h of randomizationMedical control median GCS of 5 versus intervention median GCS of 620 mmHgMedian age 120.9 monthsChildren over 12 months of age TBI with functioning intraventricular catheterN/AMarshall CT criteriaPrimary outcome: Glasgow outcome score and healthy state utility index
Guerra et al., 1999[9]Prospective Cohort57 patients: 39 (posttraumatic massive edema; therapy resistant intracranial hypertension) versus 18 (space occupying hematoma)HC for unilateral edema/swelling versus bilateral decompression over bilateral diffuse edema/sswellingAverage 4 days postaccident4 or higher30 mmHg1977-1988; younger than 301989’ younger than 40 years1991; younger than 50 (except two patients 55 and 66 years)Appearance of diffuse unilateral or bilateral brain swelling on the CT scan with correlating clinical deteriorationWorsening of GCS score and/or dilation of pupils unresponsive to lightTherapy-resistant increase in ICP to more than 30 mm Hg and/or a reduction in CPP to <45 mm HgInitial GCS score of 4 or higher and a GCS score of at least 4 on the 1st posttraumatic dayPatient older than 30 years oldPatients with devastating primary brain damageGCS 3 and/or bilateral fixed, dilated pupilsDiffuse brain swelling 31 patients with unilateral versus 26 patients with bilateral edemaGlasgow Coma Outcome Scale at 12 months

*DECRA Trial – Early decompressive craniectomy in traumatic brain injury; **STITCH – Surgical trial in intracerebral hemorrhage; ***RESCUEicp – Randomized evaluation of surgery with craniectomy for uncontrollable elevation of intracranial pressure. RCT – Randomized controlled trial; DC – Decompressive craniectomy; B/L DC – Bilateral decompressive craniectomy; GCS – Glasgow Coma Scale; DI – Diffuse injury; GOS-E – Extended Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale; GCOS – Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale; TICH – Traumatic intracranial hemorrhage; N/A – Not applicable; ICP – Intracranial pressure; CT – Computed tomography; CPP – Cerebral perfusion pressure; TBI – Traumatic brain injury; BFT – Bifrontal Craniectomy; FTP – Frontotemporoparietal; CPR – Cardiopulmonary resuscitation; BF – Bifrontal

Table 2

Clinical outcomes of randomized control trials, case-control studies, and prospective cohort studies

Trial or studyDCMedical6-months GOS-E/GOS6-months GOS-E/GOS (DC)6-months GOS-E/GOS (medical)GCS at dischargeSubgroup analysis: With versus without barbiturateMortality at 6 monthsTime to discharge
Wettervik et al., 2018[25]18/35 as a secondary DC versus 17/35 as a primary procedure; B/L DC: 6/Hemi-DC 18/Bone-flap: 1123 with thiopentalUnfavorable outcome: 24 versus 12 versus 211 versus 14Favorable outcome: 14 versus 12 versus 350 versus 7GOS-E Favorable: 14/35 Unfavorable: 21/35GOS-E Favorable: 12/23 Unfavorable: 11/23Dead: 9:2:62:7 Vegetative: 3:2:4:0Favorable outcome: 4/9 versus 7/26Unfavorable outcome: 5/9 versus 19/266/35 versus 1/23N/A
Hutchinson et al., 2016[17]RESCUEicp TrialT: 187/202B/F: 109/173U/L: 64/173Barbiturate infusion: 73/196Unfavorable outcome: 146 versus 136Favorable outcome: 55 versus 50GOS-E Favorable: 55/201 Unfavorable: 146/201Favorable: 50/196 Unfavorable: 138/196Death: 42/185 versus 83/171As mentioned previously54/201 versus 92/18815 versus 20.8 days
Mendelow et al., 2015[26]STITCH TrialEarly surgery: 61 versus 3121 versus 55Favorable: 52/82 versus 45/85Unfavorable: 30/82 versus 40/85GOS Favorable: 52/82 Unfavorable: 40/82GOS Favorable: 34/54 Unfavorable: 20/54Dead: 12 versus 28Vegetative noneN/A12/82 versus 28/85N/A
Cooper et al., 2011[24]DECRA TrialEarly DC: 73/15582/155Unfavorable outcome: 51 versus 42Favorable outcome: 22 versus 40GOS-E Favorable: 22/73 Unfavorable: 51/73GOS-E Favorable: 40/82 Unfavorable: 42/82Death: 14 versus 15GOS-E death 14 versus 15Vegetative state 9 versus 214/73 versus 15/8228 versus 37 days
Rubiano et al., 2009[27]Early DC: 16/3620/36Unfavorable outcome: 5/12 versus 7/13Favorable outcome: 7/12 versus 0/13GOS Favorable: 7/16 Unfavorable: 9/16GOS Favorable: 0/20 Unfavorable: 13/20Dead 4/16 versus 13/20N/A4/16 versus 13/2023.4 days versus 10.1 days
Taylor et al., 2001[28]DC bitemporal craniectomy: 13/2714/27Unfavorable out coma s per GCOS 6 DC versus 12 controlFavorable outcome 7 DC versus 2 controlGOS Favorable: 7/13 Unfavorable: 6/13GOS Favorable: 2/14 Unfavorable: 12/14Dead 3 DC (withdrawal of treatment) versus 6 (2 brain dead; 3n poor prognosis; 1 cerebral herniation)Health state utility index at 6 monthsUnfavorable: 7 versus 13Favorable: 6 versus 1N/A
Guerra et al., 1999[9]Early DC: 38/57Initial conservative: 17/57Favorable outcome 22 versus 11Unfavorable outcome 16 versus 6GOS Favorable: 22/38 Unfavorable: 16/38GOS Favorable: 11/17 Unfavorable: 6/17Dead 11Vegetative 5N/A11/57 versus not mentionedN/A

DC – Decompressive craniectomy; B/L DC – Bilateral decompressive craniectomy; DI – Diffuse injury; GOS-E – Extended Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale; GCS – Glasgow Coma Scale; GOS – Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale; ICP – Intracranial pressure; DECRA Trial – Early decompressive craniectomy in traumatic brain injury; RESCUEicp – Randomized evaluation of surgery with craniectomy for uncontrollable elevation of intracranial pressure; STITCH – Surgical trial in intracerebral hemorrhage; N/A – Not applicable

Baseline characteristics of randomized control trials, case-control studies, and prospective cohort studies *DECRA Trial – Early decompressive craniectomy in traumatic brain injury; **STITCH – Surgical trial in intracerebral hemorrhage; ***RESCUEicp – Randomized evaluation of surgery with craniectomy for uncontrollable elevation of intracranial pressure. RCT – Randomized controlled trial; DC – Decompressive craniectomy; B/L DC – Bilateral decompressive craniectomy; GCS – Glasgow Coma Scale; DI – Diffuse injury; GOS-E – Extended Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale; GCOS – Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale; TICH – Traumatic intracranial hemorrhage; N/A – Not applicable; ICP – Intracranial pressure; CT – Computed tomography; CPP – Cerebral perfusion pressure; TBI – Traumatic brain injury; BFT – Bifrontal Craniectomy; FTP – Frontotemporoparietal; CPR – Cardiopulmonary resuscitation; BF – Bifrontal Clinical outcomes of randomized control trials, case-control studies, and prospective cohort studies DC – Decompressive craniectomy; B/L DC – Bilateral decompressive craniectomy; DI – Diffuse injury; GOS-E – Extended Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale; GCS – Glasgow Coma Scale; GOS – Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale; ICP – Intracranial pressure; DECRA Trial – Early decompressive craniectomy in traumatic brain injury; RESCUEicp – Randomized evaluation of surgery with craniectomy for uncontrollable elevation of intracranial pressure; STITCH – Surgical trial in intracerebral hemorrhage; N/A – Not applicable

Risk of bias in the randomized control trial studies

None of the RCT trials followed adequate sequence generation (computer generation), and few had the allocation of treatment concealed. Regarding blindness of the investigator and the patient outcome, none of the trials achieved double blindness; some of them achieved single investigator blindness. This is understandable in this type of RCT, in which the procedure is evaluated, and it could be difficult to blind the investigator or the patient to treatment allocation or immediate outcome measure.

Effects of interventions

The pooled meta-analysis of all seven studies (treatment arm 458 and control arm 406) revealed the following: There is no statistically significant difference in the good clinical outcome at 6 months–1 year between early DC and medical treatment with or without late DC (Odds ratio [OR] of favorable clinical outcome at 6 months: 1.00; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.75–1.34; P = 0.99). Hence, there does not exist any comparative difference in the clinical outcome between the intervention and the control arm as indicated in [Figure 1 Panel A].
Figure 1

Pooled analysis of all studies: Comparison of decompressive craniectomy versus the standard medical management with or without late decompressive craniectomy. Panel A: The good functional long-term clinical outcome measured by Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended and Glasgow Outcome Scale at 6 months (6 months; Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended 4–8, Glasgow Outcome Scale: 4–5) The odds ratio of good clinical outcome was determined using data from all studies. Heterogenity: The probability value corresponds to Breslow–Day Test. Panel B: This figure is indicating the mortality rate at discharge or at 6 months of decompressive craniectomy versus the standard medical care with or without late decompressive craniectomy. The relative risk was calculated based on the data from the above-mentioned studies

Pooled analysis of all studies: Comparison of decompressive craniectomy versus the standard medical management with or without late decompressive craniectomy. Panel A: The good functional long-term clinical outcome measured by Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended and Glasgow Outcome Scale at 6 months (6 months; Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended 4–8, Glasgow Outcome Scale: 4–5) The odds ratio of good clinical outcome was determined using data from all studies. Heterogenity: The probability value corresponds to Breslow–Day Test. Panel B: This figure is indicating the mortality rate at discharge or at 6 months of decompressive craniectomy versus the standard medical care with or without late decompressive craniectomy. The relative risk was calculated based on the data from the above-mentioned studies Six studies have reported the mortality rate in their results.[17242526272829] The RR of mortality at discharge or 6 months is 0.62; 95% CI: 0.40–0.94; P = 0.03. Hence, the mortality rate is reduced with the early DC as compared to the standard medical management ± late DC as showed in [Figure 1 Panel B]. The outcome in the adult population after excluding the pediatric population in the first study[28] indicates that OR of favorable clinical outcome at 6 months: 0.94; 95% CI: 0.70–1.27; P = 0.70. The RR of mortality at discharge or 6 months is 0.59; 95% CI: 0.47–0.74; P < 0.00001. Only three studies compared the early DC versus the late DC in TBI.[926] There is no statistical significance difference in the good clinical outcome and unfavorable clinical outcome among those patients who had early DC versus late DC. The OR of good clinical outcome; 1.30; 95% CI: 0.75–2.27; P = 0.35 [Figure 2 Panel A].
Figure 2

Panel A: Subgroup analysis based upon the favorable clinical outcome: The panel shows favorable clinical outcome at 6 months of early decompressive craniectomy versus the late decompressive craniectomy. The odds ratio of favorable clinical outcome; 1.30; 95% confidence interval: 0.75–2.27; P = 0.35. Panel B: Subgroup analysis based on Relative Risk of Mortality: The panel shows mortality of early decompressive craniectomy versus the late decompressive craniectomy. The risk ratio of mortality; 0.43; 95% confidence interval: 0.26–0.71; P = 0.0009

Panel A: Subgroup analysis based upon the favorable clinical outcome: The panel shows favorable clinical outcome at 6 months of early decompressive craniectomy versus the late decompressive craniectomy. The odds ratio of favorable clinical outcome; 1.30; 95% confidence interval: 0.75–2.27; P = 0.35. Panel B: Subgroup analysis based on Relative Risk of Mortality: The panel shows mortality of early decompressive craniectomy versus the late decompressive craniectomy. The risk ratio of mortality; 0.43; 95% confidence interval: 0.26–0.71; P = 0.0009 Regarding the mortality rate, it is reduced significantly in the early DC group as compared to the late DC group. RR of mortality rate in early DC versus late DC is 0.43; 95% CI: 0.26–0.71; P = 0.0009, [Figure 2 Panel B].

Discussion

Our meta-analysis revealed that early DC and standard medical management whether alone or accompanied by late DC has almost the same effect on the functional clinical outcome of the patients with TBI. However, early DC reduces the mortality rate as compared to the patients who underwent late DC. However, because of several limitations in the studies mentioned above (lack of universal outcome scale, no double blindness in randomization, and clinical follow-up, and the small sample size in some studies), future double-blind, randomized control trial with large sample size is needed to prove the concept of early versus late DC. In addition, more evidence is required regarding the timing of the surgery in improving the clinical and functional outcome of patients with TBI. The medical literature regarding early DC is very conflicting. There are several studies not in support of early DC. For example, Faleiro et al.[30] dichotomized 89 patients into <6 h, 6–24 h, and >24 h for DC and found that patients who were operated early had 59% mortality as compared to the 53% of patients who had the surgery later. Al-Jishi et al.[31] found that the primary DC had 45.5% good outcome and 40.9% mortality whereas, secondary DC had 73.1% good outcome and 15.4% mortality in his retrospective study. Albanèse et al.[32] found that patients who had primary decompression within 24 h had 20% good recovery and 50% died, while those who had secondary decompression (>24 h) had 38% good recovery and only 20% died. An early decompression was performed if the GCS was <6 with clinical signs of cerebral herniation (the absence of pupillary reflexes); ICP was not measured in these patients. The late decompression was performed if patients had intractable intracranial hypertension of >35 mmHg, unilateral or bilateral absence of pupillary reflex with abnormal CT head findings. However, he recommended performing early surgery in patients with intracranial hematoma and brain swelling, which eventually will improve the clinical outcome. On the other hand, there are some literatures in support of early DC in improving outcome. For example, Honeybul et al.[33] carried out a cohort of 186 patients who required DC for severe TBI (2004–2010) indicated that none of the patients improved to achieve a level of independence or moderate disability, many did appear to have adapted to their disability and recalibrated their expectations for quality of life to a level of disability that they have previously thought unacceptable. Hartings et al.[8] compared the neurosurgical approaches in the treatment of TBI at two academic centers in the Cooperative Studies on Brain Injury Depolarizations at Kings College Hospital (KCH, n = 27) and Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU, n = 24) from July 2004 to March 2010. He found that patients treated at VCU underwent surgery earlier, had larger bone flaps, and more frequently underwent craniectomy than craniotomy. These differences were particularly accentuated in patients undergoing earlier lesion evacuation and corresponded to significantly lower postoperative ICP values, less spreading depolarizations, and better outcome (good outcome in 69% vs. 29% of cases). As by Seelig et al.,[29] if the surgery could be performed within 4 h, the mortality is only 30%, whereas if the surgery is performed over the 4 h, then the rate of mortality increases over 90%. Akyuz et al.[34] noted that the 40 patients who had early decompressive surgery as first tiers had much more portion of a better outcome than the other 36 patients operated as second tier (44.4% vs. 12.5%, P = 0.0018). From the first glance at our meta-analysis result, one might conclude that there is no benefit from early DC in TBI patients. However, the intervention if carried out at an early stage is associated with decrease in the mortality rate. Our meta-analysis finding might be explained by being underpowered to show clinical benefit, and further trials are needed with larger sample size to evaluate the efficacy of early or primary DC versus the late or secondary DC in moderate-to-severe TBI. Our study has several limitations. First, there is the possibility of selection and publication bias in our systematic review since only two reviewers carried out this part of the process. The reviewers might therefore be more influenced by the positive trial results than by the negative ones. However, we tried to limit such bias by doing the following steps: a gray literature review, in which, we reviewed the abstracts from several meetings to capture any RCT that was presented as an abstract but not published because of a negative result. Second, the lack of access to individual patient's data is one of the limitations. Third, there is a lack of same use of outcome scale among all the studies as some used GCOS while other used Extended Glasgow Coma Scale. Finally, our meta-analysis results cannot be generalized to all forms of decompressive craniectomies as there exists the difference between the thresholds of ICP as well as the timing of DC; thus, the intervention in the form of DC is dependent on it. In conclusion, our data point that early DC saves life. However, there is no clinically significant relationship in the favorable and unfavorable clinical outcome between the two groups. Thus, our meta-analysis provides a basis to design the RCT with less bias, and determine the sample size of Phase-2 randomized trial of early versus late DC in patients with moderate-to-severe TBI.

Financial support and sponsorship

Nil.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts of interest.
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