Abstract
Background: The rapidly increasing number of elderly (≥ 65 years old) with TBI is accompanied by substantial medical and economic consequences. An ASDH is the most common injury in elderly with TBI and the surgical versus conservative treatment of this patient group remains an important clinical dilemma. Current BTF guidelines are not based on high-quality evidence and compliance is low, allowing for large international treatment variation. The RESET-ASDH trial is an international multicenter RCT on the (cost-)effectiveness of early neurosurgical hematoma evacuation versus initial conservative treatment in elderly with a t-ASDH Methods: In total, 300 patients will be recruited from 17 Belgian and Dutch trauma centers. Patients ≥ 65 years with at first presentation a GCS ≥ 9 and a t-ASDH > 10 mm or a t-ASDH < 10 mm and a midline shift > 5 mm, or a GCS < 9 with a traumatic ASDH < 10 mm and a midline shift < 5 mm without extracranial explanation for the comatose state, for whom clinical equipoise exists will be randomized to early surgical hematoma evacuation or initial conservative management with the possibility of delayed secondary surgery. When possible, patients or their legal representatives will be asked for consent before inclusion. When obtaining patient or proxy consent is impossible within the therapeutic time window, patients are enrolled using the deferred consent procedure. Medical-ethical approval was obtained in the Netherlands and Belgium. The choice of neurosurgical techniques will be left to the discretion of the neurosurgeon. Patients will be analyzed according to an intention-to-treat design. The primary endpoint will be functional outcome on the GOS-E after 1 year. Patient recruitment starts in 2022 with the exact timing depending on the current COVID-19 crisis and is expected to end in 2024. Discussion: The study results will be implemented after publication and presented on international conferences. Depending on the trial results, the current Brain Trauma Foundation guidelines will either be substantiated by high-quality evidence or will have to be altered. Trial registration: Nederlands Trial Register (NTR), Trial NL9012. ClinicalTrials.gov, Trial NCT04648436.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 242 |
Journal | Trials |
Volume | 23 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 29 Mar 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:This work is supported by the BeNeFIT grant (ZonMw & KCE) number 852101065. The Belgian Health Care Knowledge Centre (KCE) and ZonMw, the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Care Innovation launched a joint program under the name “BeNeFIT”. Extensive external peer review of the protocol was part of the multiple-round funding process. The funding bodies were not involved in the design of the study and will not be involved in data collection or the primary analysis of the data. They are, however, entitled to publish details of the selection process, research objectives, plan and costs of the clinical study as captured in a legal consortium agreement.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).