| Literature DB >> 34328561 |
Shaian Zolfaghari1, Jiri Bartek2,3,4, Isabelle Strom2,4, Felix Djärf5, San-San Wong2,4, Nils Ståhl5, Asgeir S Jakola6,7,8, Henrietta Nittby Redebrandt5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) is one of the most common neurosurgical diseases. In surgical management of CSDH, there is a lack of standardized guidelines concerning surgical techniques and a lack of consensus on which technique(s) are optimal. Neurosurgical centers have shown a wide variation in surgical techniques. The purpose of this study was to compare two different surgical techniques, one burr hole craniostomy with an active subgaleal drain (BHC) and minicraniotomy with a passive subdural drain (MC).Entities:
Keywords: CSDH; Complications; Outcome; Recurrence; Surgical method
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34328561 PMCID: PMC8520513 DOI: 10.1007/s00701-021-04902-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurochir (Wien) ISSN: 0001-6268 Impact factor: 2.816
Baseline characteristics of the study population. Variables are stratified for the two surgical methods
| Variable, No. (%) | BHC with active subgaleal drain N = 560 | Minicraniotomy with passive subdural drain N = 443 |
|---|---|---|
| Mean age (years) ± SD | 74.1 ± 12.9 | 75.6 ± 11.6 |
| Male, n = 684 (68.2) | 369 (65.9) | 315 (71.1) |
| Charlson comorbidity index | ||
| Score over 1, n = 317 (31.6) | 190 (33.9) | 127 (28.7) |
| Antithrombotic treatment, n = 251 (25.0) | 142 (25.4) | 109 (24.6) |
| Vitamin K antagonist, n = 174 (17.3) | 83 (14.8) | 91 (20.5) |
| Preoperative GCS score* | ||
| 13–15, n = 911 (90.8) | 503 (89.8) | 408 (92.1) |
| 9–12, n = 47 (4.7) | 30 (5.4) | 17 (3.8) |
| 3–8, n = 24 (2.4) | 14 (2.5) | 10 (2.3) |
| CT hematoma density** | ||
| Hyperdense, n = 215 (21.4) | 134 (23.9) | 81 (18.3) |
| Isodense, n = 429 (42.8) | 257 (45.9) | 172 (38.8) |
| Hypodense, n = 335 (33.4) | 159 (28.4) | 176 (39.7) |
| Mixed densities, n = 19 (1.9) | 10 (1.8) | 9 (2.0) |
SD: Standard deviation
21 patients with missing GCS values
5 patients with missing characterization of CT hematoma density
Surgical characteristics and outcome data of the study population. The data in the following table is stratified for the two surgical methods
| Variable | BHC with active subgaleal drain | Minicraniotomy with passive subdural drain N = 443 |
|---|---|---|
| Mean midline shift (mm) ± SD | 8.8 ± 4.2 | 9.5 ± 4.2 |
| Mean axial hematoma diameter (mm) ± SD | 22.5 ± 6.4 | 22.4 ± 5.6 |
| Local anesthesia with light sedation, n = 934 (93.1) | 543 (97.0) | 391 (88.3) |
| Mean time with drainage system (days) ± SD | 1.0 ± 0.06 | 1.2 ± 0.44 |
| Reoperated within 3 months after primary evacuation, n = 98 (9.8) | 50 (8.9) | 48 (10.8) |
| 30-day mortality, n = 25 (2.5) | 13 (2.3) | 12 (2.7) |
| 1-year mortality, n = 112 (11.2) | 70 (12.5) | 42 (9.5) |
| Complications according to Ibañez, n = 131 (13.1) | 35 (6.3) | 96 (21.7) |
| Grade Ia: complication requiring no drug treatment | 5 (0.90) | 21 (4.7) |
| Grade Ib: complication requiring drug treatment | 17 (3.0) | 50 (11.3) |
| Grade IIa: complication requiring intervention without general anesthesia | 5 (0.9) | 6 (1.4) |
| Grade IIb: complication requiring intervention with general anesthesia | 1 (0.2) | 10 (2.3) |
| Grade IIIa: complication involving single organ failure and ICU care | 2 (0.4) | 1 (0.20) |
| Grade IIIb: complication involving multiple organ failure and ICU care | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Grade IV: complication resulting in death | 5 (0.9) | 8 (1.8) |
SD: Standard deviation
Univariable analysis of complications associated with the two treatment groups. All tests were done with Fisher’s exact test
| Complication type | BHC with active subgaleal drain N = 560 (%) | Minicraniotomy with passive subdural drain N = 443 (%) | P-value | CI 95% | Adjusted residual value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grade Ia: complication requiring no drug treatment | 5 (0.90) | 21 (4.7) | 0.001* | 2.1–14.8 | 3.8 |
| Grade Ib: complication requiring drug treatment | 17 (3.0) | 50 (11.3) | 0.001* | 2.3–7.2 | 5.2 |
| Grade IIa: complication requiring intervention without general anesthesia | 5 (0.9) | 6 (1.4) | 0.550 | 0.5–5.0 | 0.7 |
| Grade IIb: complication requiring intervention with general anesthesia | 1 (0.2) | 10 (2.3) | 0.003* | 1.6–101.2 | 3.1 |
| Grade IIIa: complication involving single organ failure and ICU care | 2 (0.4) | 1 (0.2) | 1.000 | 0.1–7.0 | − 0.4 |
| Grade IV: complication resulting in death | 5 (0.9) | 8 (1.8) | 0.263 | 0.7–6.3 | 1.3 |
*Significant p-value
Characterization of Ibañez IIb complications in the MC subgroup
| Type of IIb complication | Total complications n = 10 (%) |
|---|---|
| Postoperative acute subdural hematoma | 8 (80.0) |
| Postoperative epidural hematoma | 1 (10.0) |
| Postoperative subdural empyema | 1 (10.0) |
Fig. 1Survival function curve displaying the non-significant difference in 30-day mortality between the two treatment groups