| Literature DB >> 31143249 |
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 Electronic databases and gray literature (unpublished articles) were searched under different MeSH terms from 1990 to present.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
Baseline characteristics of randomized control trials, case-control studies, and prospective cohort studies
| Trial or study | Type of study: RCT/CCS/Cohort | Intervention (treatment/control) | Time to craniectomy from randomization | Initial GCS | ICP threshold | Age (intervention/control) (mean±SD) | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | Type of injury on the basis of CT scan | Outcome measures | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wettervik | RCT | 609:DC: 35 thiopental/no DC group: 23 | B/L DC: 6/hemi-DC: 18 versus medical care (thiopental) | N/A | GCS: 1-2: 5:4:20:5 | N/A | 40:23:544:7 | Same as DECRA and RESCUE-ICP study | Same ad DECRA and RESCUE-ICP study | DI II: 6:6:283:1 | GOS-E at 6 months |
| Hutchinson | RCT | 408 | Secondary DC (unilateral FTP craniectomy or BF craniec)/medical management | 2.2 h | GCS 1 or 2: 96/181 versus 85/170 | >25 mmHg for 30 min to 1 h | 10-65 years | Head injury requiring ICP monitoring | Bilateral fixed and dilated pupil | Diffuse injury: 161/198 versus 141/186 | Primary: GOS-E at 6 months |
| Mendelow | RCT | 170 patients: 82 versus 86 (2 excluded) | Early surgery versus medicaltreatment | Mean 4 versus 58 | 13-15; 70 | >30 mmHg | 51 (32-63) versus 50 (33-61) | TBI within 48 h of injury | Extradural or subdural hematoma that required surgery | Evidence of TICH on CT scan with a confluent volume of attenuation | Primary outcome: GOS at 6 months |
| Cooper | RCT | 165: T: 73 versus C: 82 | BFT craniectomy versus standard care | 2.3 h | 5 versus 6 | >20 mmHg for 1-2 h | 23.7 years versus 24.6 years | Ages of 15-59 years | Not deemed suitable for full active treatment dilated, unreactive pupils, mass lesions, spinal cord injury, and cardiac arrest | Diffuse injury II 17 versus 27 | Primary outcome: GOS-E at 6 months |
| Rubiano | Case-control study | T: 16 | Primary decompression versus secondary decompression as a second tier therapy | Within 12 h of early decompression while 24-48 h of medical management | Severe head injury GCS <9 | 25 mmHg | 18.3 years versus 24.3 years | Age younger than 50 years | Brain dead | CT with diffuse injury III or IV of the Marshall classification | Primary outcomes: Mortaliy and Glasgow Coma Outcome Scale |
| Taylor | RCT | 27: 14 medical versus 13 to DC | Standarized management versus SM+DC | 19.2 h (since time of injury) 6 h of randomization | Medical control median GCS of 5 versus intervention median GCS of 6 | 20 mmHg | Median age 120.9 months | Children over 12 months of age TBI with functioning intraventricular catheter | N/A | Marshall CT criteria | Primary outcome: Glasgow outcome score and healthy state utility index |
| Guerra | Prospective Cohort | 57 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/sswelling | Average 4 days postaccident | 4 or higher | 30 mmHg | 1977-1988; younger than 30 | Appearance of diffuse unilateral or bilateral brain swelling on the CT scan with correlating clinical deterioration | Patient older than 30 years old | Diffuse brain swelling 31 patients with unilateral versus 26 patients with bilateral edema | Glasgow 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
Clinical outcomes of randomized control trials, case-control studies, and prospective cohort studies
| Trial or study | DC | Medical | 6-months GOS-E/GOS | 6-months GOS-E/GOS (DC) | 6-months GOS-E/GOS (medical) | GCS at discharge | Subgroup analysis: With versus without barbiturate | Mortality at 6 months | Time to discharge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wettervik | 18/35 as a secondary DC versus 17/35 as a primary procedure; B/L DC: 6/Hemi-DC 18/Bone-flap: 11 | 23 with thiopental | Unfavorable outcome: 24 versus 12 versus 211 versus 14 | GOS-E | GOS-E | Dead: 9:2:62:7 Vegetative: 3:2:4:0 | Favorable outcome: 4/9 versus 7/26 | 6/35 versus 1/23 | N/A |
| Hutchinson | T: 187/202 | Barbiturate infusion: 73/196 | Unfavorable outcome: 146 versus 136 | GOS-E | Favorable: 50/196 Unfavorable: 138/196 | Death: 42/185 versus 83/171 | As mentioned previously | 54/201 versus 92/188 | 15 versus 20.8 days |
| Mendelow | Early surgery: 61 versus 31 | 21 versus 55 | Favorable: 52/82 versus 45/85 | GOS | GOS Favorable: 34/54 Unfavorable: 20/54 | Dead: 12 versus 28 | N/A | 12/82 versus 28/85 | N/A |
| Cooper | Early DC: 73/155 | 82/155 | Unfavorable outcome: 51 versus 42 | GOS-E | GOS-E | Death: 14 versus 15 | GOS-E death 14 versus 15 | 14/73 versus 15/82 | 28 versus 37 days |
| Rubiano | Early DC: 16/36 | 20/36 | Unfavorable outcome: 5/12 versus 7/13 | GOS | GOS | Dead 4/16 versus 13/20 | N/A | 4/16 versus 13/20 | 23.4 days versus 10.1 days |
| Taylor | DC bitemporal craniectomy: 13/27 | 14/27 | Unfavorable out coma s per GCOS 6 DC versus 12 control | GOS | GOS | Dead 3 DC (withdrawal of treatment) versus 6 (2 brain dead; 3n poor prognosis; 1 cerebral herniation) | Health state utility index at 6 months | N/A | |
| Guerra | Early DC: 38/57 | Initial conservative: 17/57 | Favorable outcome 22 versus 11 | GOS | GOS | Dead 11 | N/A | 11/57 versus not mentioned | N/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
Figure 1Pooled 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
Figure 2Panel 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