| Literature DB >> 32033578 |
Airton Leonardo de Oliveira Manoel1,2.
Abstract
Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage is a devastating disease, accounting for 10 to 15% of all types of stroke; however, it is associated with disproportionally higher rates of mortality and disability. Despite significant progress in the acute management of these patients, the ideal surgical management is still to be determined. Surgical hematoma drainage has many theoretical benefits, such as the prevention of mass effect and cerebral herniation, reduction in intracranial pressure, and the decrease of excitotoxicity and neurotoxicity of blood products.Several surgical techniques have been considered, such as open craniotomy, decompressive craniectomy, neuroendoscopy, and minimally invasive catheter evacuation followed by thrombolysis. Open craniotomy is the most studied approach in this clinical scenario, the first randomized controlled trial dating from the early 1960s. Since then, a large number of studies have been published, which included two large, well-designed, well-powered, multicenter, multinational, randomized clinical trials. These studies, The International Surgical Trial in Intracerebral Hemorrhage (STICH), and the STICH II have shown no clinical benefit for early surgical evacuation of intraparenchymal hematoma in patients with spontaneous supratentorial hemorrhage when compared with best medical management plus delayed surgery if necessary. However, the results of STICH trials may not be generalizable, because of the high rates of patients' crossover from medical management to the surgical group. Without these high crossover percentages, the rates of unfavorable outcome and death with conservative management would have been higher. Additionally, comatose patients and patients at risk of cerebral herniation were not included. In these cases, surgery may be lifesaving, which prevented those patients of being enrolled in such trials. This article reviews the clinical evidence of surgical hematoma evacuation, and its role to decrease mortality and improve long-term functional outcome after spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage.Entities:
Keywords: Glasgow outcome scale; Hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage; Intracerebral hemorrhage; MISTIE; Neurosurgical procedures; STICH; Stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32033578 PMCID: PMC7006102 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-020-2749-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Mechanisms of secondary brain injury after ICH. MLS - midline shift; IVH - intraventricular hemorrhage
Fig. 2Case 01 of open craniotomy for hematoma drainage. a Day 1—a large intraparenchymal hematoma centered on the putamen, right insular, and frontotemporal region, with extravasation into the subarachnoid space of the sylvian fissure and temporal fossa, measuring about 6.1 × 4.5 × 4.8 cm on its largest axes. b Day 2—Hematoma was surgically removed by open craniotomy. CT shows signs of surgical manipulation characterized by enlargement and densification of soft tissue planes with gaseous foci underlying the right parietotemporal craniotomy. There was reduction of the dimensions of the intraparenchymal hematoma. c Day 7—Follow-up CT scan 6 days after surgical drainage. d Day 21—Follow-up CT scan 21 days after surgical drainage. Patient was discharged home after this last CT scan with a modified Rankin scale 4 (able to walk with assistance)
Fig. 3Case 02 of open craniotomy for hematoma drainage. a, b Day 1—Large hematoma in the left cerebral hemisphere leading to collapse of the left lateral ventricle with a midline shift of 12 mm, with a large left ventricular and third ventricle flooding, as well as diffuse effacement of cortical sulci of that hemisphere. c–e Day 2—Left frontoparietal craniotomy, with well-positioned bone fragment, aligned and fixed with metal clips. Reduction of the left frontal/frontotemporal intraparenchymal hematic content, with remnant hematic residues and air foci in this region. There was a significant reduction in the mass effect, with a decrease in lateral ventricular compression and a reduction in the midline shift. Bifrontal pneumocephalus causing shift and compressing the adjacent parenchyma. f–h Day 36—Resolution of residual hematic residues and pneumocephalus. Encephalomalacia in the left frontal/frontotemporal region. Despite the good surgical results, the patient remained in vegetative state
Fig. 4Open craniotomy. Patient lies on an operating table and receives general anesthesia. The head is set in a three-pin skull fixation device attached to the operating table, in order to hold the head standing still. Once the anesthesia and positioning are established, skin is prepared, cleaned with an antiseptic solution, and incised typically behind the hairline. Then, both skin and muscles are dissected and lifted off the skull. Once the bone is exposed, burr holes are built in by a special drill. The burr holes are made to permit the entrance of the craniotome. The craniotomy flap is lifted and removed, uncovering the dura mater. The bone flap is stored to be replaced at the end of the procedure. The dura mater is then opened to expose the brain parenchyma. Surgical retractors are used to open a passage to assess the hematoma. After the hematoma is drained, the retractors are removed, the dura mater is closed, and the bone flap is positioned, aligned, and fixed with metal clips. Finally, the skin is sutured
Fig. 5Surgical trajectories of catheter insertion in minimally invasive surgery. This figure was adapted from previously published images by Fam et al. [49]. a Basal ganglia hemorrhage (caudate, putamen, or anterior capsule). The catheter is inserted through the forehead. Catheter trajectory: along the clot longitudinal axis. b Thalamic or posterior capsular hemorrhage. The catheter is inserted through the parietal-occipital area. Catheter trajectory: along the clot longitudinal axis. c Lobar hemorrhage. The catheter is inserted through the superficial area contiguous to the clot. Catheter trajectory: along the clot widest axis
Randomized controlled trials comparing hematoma evacuation vs. conservative medical management or placebo
| Study | Design | Surgical technique | Included patients (conservative/surgery) | Crossover | Timing of surgery (h) | Outcome definition and timing of assessment | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McKissock et al. (1961) [ | Double-center, prospective randomized clinical trial | Craniotomy | 180 (91/89) | 1 patient | 72 (most patients were treated within 48 h) | - Full work; partial disability; total disability - 6 months | The authors were “unable to demonstrate any benefit from surgery in regard either to mortality or morbidity” |
| Auer et al. (1989) [ | Prospective single-center randomized clinical trial | Endoscopic-guided evacuation | 100 (50/50) | Not reported | 48 | - 6 Grades Outcome* - 6 months | Lower mortality (30 vs. 70%, |
| Juvela et al. (1989) [ | Prospective single-center randomized clinical trial | Craniotomy | 52 (26/26) | Not reported | 48 | - Glasgow Outcome Scale - 1, 6, and 12 months | Surgery did not offer any advantage over conservative treatment. Additionally, in comatose patients (GCS = 7–10), surgery decreased mortality, but patients survived with poor quality of life. |
| Batjer et al. (1990) [ | Prospective single-center randomized clinical trial | Craniotomy | - Total = 21 - 9 best medical management - 4 best medical management + intracranial pressure monitoring - 8 surgical evacuation | None | 24 | 1 (dead or vegetative) 2 (dependent) 3 (independent at home) 4 (return to prestrike activity) - 6 months | - 4 out of 8 patients died in the surgical group - 2 were capable of independent life. - Surgery was ineffective compared with best medical management or best medical management + ICP monitoring |
| Morgenstern et al. (1998) [ | Prospective single-center randomized clinical trial | Craniotomy | 41 (34/7) | None | 12 | - Barthel score and mortality - 1 and 6 months | - 6-month mortality rate and functional outcome favor conservative group |
| Zuccarello M et al. (1999) [ | Prospective three centers randomized clinical trial | Craniotomy CT-guided stereotaxic placement of a catheter | 20 (11/9) - 5 craniotomy - 4 stereotaxic evacuation - 11 best medical therapy | 1 patient | 24 | - Glasgow Outcome Scale - 3 months | No difference in the likelihood of a good outcome or mortality at 3 months. |
| Morgenstern et al. (2001) [ | Prospective single-center cohort | Ultra-early craniotomy | 11 (all surgical) | None | 4 | - Barthel score, modified Rankin Scale and mortality - 6 months | - Interrupted after planned interim analysis, because of increased rates of rebleeding with ultra-early craniotomy |
| Teernstra et al. (2003) [ | Multicenter randomized controlled trial (13 centers) | Stereotactic aspiration combined with urokinase injection | 71 (35/36) | - One crossover from medical to craniotomy - One patient from stereotactic group underwent craniotomy - Four patients received no stereotactic drainage | 72 | - Death - 6 months | - The trial was prematurely stopped due to slow recruitment - Mortality 3-months was not statistically significant, 56% in the surgical group vs. 59% in the nonsurgical group |
| Hattori et al. (2004) [ | Prospective single-center randomized clinical trial | Stereotactic evacuation | 242 (121/121) | None | - Modified Rankin Scale - 12 months | Stereotactic evacuation reduced mortality and improved functional outcomes in patients with neurological Grade 3 (eyes closed but open to strong stimuli) | |
| STICH (2005) [ | Multicenter randomized controlled trial (83 centers in 27 countries) | Craniotomy 75% Burrhole 8% Endoscopy 7% Stereotaxy 7% Other 3% Not recorded | 1033 (530/503) | 26% | 72 h of ictus and 24 h of randomization | - Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale according to a prognosis-based methodology - 6 months | No overall benefit in mortality or functional outcome mortality was found with surgery |
| Pantazis et al. (2006) [ | Prospective single-center randomized clinical trial | Craniotomy | 108 (54/54) | 2 patients | 8 | - Glasgow Outcome Scale - 12 months | - 33% of patients in the surgical group vs. only 9% of patients in the conservative group had a Glasgow Outcome Scale > 3 ( - There is no mortality benefit with surgery. - When functional outcome was stratified by neurological status on admission, hematoma volume and location, no benefit with surgery was seen for patients with GCS < 8 or ICH ≥ 80 ml at enrollment |
| Kim et al. (2009) [ | Prospective single-center randomized clinical trial | Stereotactic-guided evacuation | 387 (183/204) | 23 patients (they were excluded from the analysis) | 12 h up to 5 days | - Modified Barthel Indices (MBI) and the modified Rankin Scale - 6 months | - Stereotactic-guided evacuation had a significant effect on a functional recovery - MBI was 90.9 in the surgical group vs. 62.4 in conservative group ( - mRS was 1.2 in the surgical group vs. 3.0 in the conservative group ( |
| Wang et al. (2009) [ | Multicenter randomized controlled trial (42 centers) | Minimally invasive craniopuncture combined with urokinase injection | 377 (182/195) | - 16 patients (7 patients randomized to craniopuncture therapy refused operation, and 9 patients randomized to conservative treatment crossover to surgery) - they were excluded from the analysis | Mean time in hours from stroke onset to operation (SD) = 21.1 (15.9) | - Modified Rankin Scale and Barthel Index - 3 months | - No significant difference in activities of daily living score - The proportion of dependent survival patients (modified Rankin scale > 2) in the craniopuncture group (40.9%) was significantly lower than that in the conservative group (63.0%) - No significant difference in the cumulative fatality rates |
| STICH II (2013) [ | Multicenter randomized controlled trial (78 centers) | Craniotomy 99% Craniectomy < 1% †Minimally invasive 1% | 601 (294/307) | 21% | 48 h of ictus and 12 h of randomization | - Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale according to a prognosis-based methodology - 6 months | - 59% of the surgery group had an unfavorable outcome versus 62% in the initial conservative group (absolute difference = 3.7%, 95% CI = − 4.3–11.6, OR = 0.86, 95% CI = 0.62–1.20, - No overall benefit in functional outcome or mortality was found |
| MISTIE (2016) [ | Randomized, controlled, open-label, phase 2 trial (26 centers) | Image-guided, catheter-based, stereotactic aspiration and thrombolysis (alteplase 0.3 mg or 1.0 mg every 8 h for up to nine doses) | 96 (42/54) | - 4 patients in the conservative group and 2 in the minimally invasive surgery plus alteplase underwent craniotomy | - 57% underwent surgery within 36 h, while 43% underwent surgery beyond 36 h | - Primary outcomes: 30-day mortality; 7-day procedure-related mortality; 30-day bacterial brain infection; symptomatic bleeding within 72 h after the last dose. | - Primary outcomes did not differ between the two groups - Asymptomatic hemorrhages were more common in the surgical group |
| Intraoperative Stereotactic Computed Tomography-Guided Endoscopic Surgery for Brain Hemorrhage (2016) [ | Multicenter randomized controlled trial (78 centers) | Intraoperative Stereotactic Computed Tomography-Guided Endoscopic Surgery | 24 | None | 48 | - Modified Rankin Scale - 6 and 12 months | - Early computerized tomographic image-guided endoscopic surgery is a safe and effective - One bleed occurred peri-operatively - The surgical intervention group had a greater percentage of patients with favorable neurological outcome |
| CLEAR III (2017) [ | Randomized, multicenter, multiregional, placebo-controlled trial (73 centers) | Thrombolytic removal of intraventricular hemorrhage (alteplase 1 mg through an EVD, every 8 h, to a max. 12 doses) | 500 (251 placebo/ 249 alteplase) | None | 72 | - Modified Rankin Scale - 6 months | - The injection of intrathecal alteplase did not improve functional outcomes in IVH patients - 6-month modified Rankin scale (mRS) of 0–3 was not significantly different between the r-tPA and saline groups - Treatment was associated with lower case, to the cost of a higher proportion of patients in a vegetative state |
| MISTIE III (2019) [ | Randomized, controlled, open-label, blinded endpoint phase 3 trial (78 centers) | Minimally invasive catheter evacuation followed by thrombolysis (alteplase 1.0 mg every 8 h for up to nine doses) | 506 (251/255) | None | 72 | - Modified Rankin Scale - 12 months | - MISTIE did not improve long-term outcome - 110 patients (45%) in the MISTIE group vs. 100 patients (41%) in the conservative group achieved a favorable outcome [adjusted risk difference 4% (95% CI − 4 to 12); - Meta-analysis including only multisite trials of MISTIE was performed by the authors and no significant benefit of MISTIE was found (OR 0.61, 95% CI 0.29–1.26). |
†Minimally invasive procedures were burrhole with endoscopic evacuation in two patients and keyhole evacuation in one patient. *Grade 1—patient leads a full and independent life without neurological deficit; Grade 2—patient leads a full and independent life with minimal neurological deficit; Grade 3—patient has neurological or intellectual impairment, but is independent and able to work part-time; Grade 4—patient has neurological deficit, is unable to work but is capable of self-care; Grade 5—conscious patient totally dependent on others for activities of the day; Grade 6—dead
Pros and cons in the STICH trials
Strong points of STICH trials • Well-designed, well-powered randomized clinical trials • Multicenter, multinational • The research question tested was biologically plausible • Very low rate of missing long-term follow-up • Adoption of prognosis-based outcome • The surgical group was limited to patients who had early surgery (within 72 h of hemorrhage and within 24 h of randomization) • Although the patients, surrogates, and site investigators were aware of treatments’ allocation; the data manager was the only study person that knew patients’ allocation at the coordinating center. | |
Weak points of STICH trials • Large cross-over from conservative to surgical group: approximately one quarter of patients in the initial conservative group crossed over to surgery due to delayed neurological deterioration. These patients were more likely to bear hematomas ≥ 50 ml, and those with a predicted poor prognosis • The clinical uncertain principle: patients were only included if the responsible neurosurgeon was unsure about the clinical benefits of either treatment. Therefore, patients who were considered to benefit from hematoma evacuation were not included in the study. The evaluation and decision were on discretion of responsible neurosurgeon, leading to selection bias. However, including comatose patients with expanding hematomas or brain herniation in the conservative management would not be ethically acceptable, since surgery is likely a life-saving measure for this subset of patients. • If no patient had crossed over to surgery, the rates of unfavorable outcome and death in the initial conservative management group may have been higher. • Large number of excluded patients in the STICH II trial (> 3300) because of impaired level of consciousness at the time of randomization, which adds additional selection bias to the study. Patients with preserved level of consciousness are those with less severe hemorrhages, therefore these patients have a higher likelihood of favorable outcome, irrespective of treatment. |