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Clinical Trial
. 1999 Sep;30(9):1833-9.
doi: 10.1161/01.str.30.9.1833.

Early surgical treatment for supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage: a randomized feasibility study

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Early surgical treatment for supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage: a randomized feasibility study

M Zuccarello et al. Stroke. 1999 Sep.

Abstract

Background and purpose: The safety and the effectiveness of the surgical treatment of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) remain controversial. To investigate the feasibility of urgent surgical evacuation of ICH, we conducted a small, randomized feasibility study of early surgical treatment versus current nonoperative management in patients with spontaneous supratentorial ICH.

Methods: Patients with spontaneous supratentorial ICH who presented to 1 university and 2 community hospitals were randomized to surgical treatment or best medical treatment. Principal eligibility criteria were ICH volume >10 cm(3) on baseline CT scan with a focal neurological deficit, Glasgow Coma Scale score >4 at the time of enrollment, randomization and therapy within 24 hours of symptom onset, surgery within 3 hours of randomization, and no evidence for ruptured aneurysm or arteriovenous malformation. The primary end point was the 3-month Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS). A good outcome was defined as a 3-month GOS score >3.

Results: Twenty patients were randomized over 24 months, 9 to surgical intervention and 11 to medical treatment. The median time from onset of symptoms to presentation at the treating hospitals was 3 hours and 17 minutes, the time from randomization to surgery was 1 hour and 20 minutes, and the time from onset of symptoms to surgery was 8 hours and 35 minutes. The likelihood of a good outcome (primary outcome measure: GOS score >3) for the surgical treatment group (56%) did not differ significantly from the medical treatment group (36%). There was no significant difference in mortality at 3 months. Analysis of the secondary 3-month outcome measures showed a nonsignificant trend toward a better outcome in the surgical treatment group versus the medical treatment group for the median GOS, Barthel Index, and Rankin Scale and a significant difference in the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score (4 versus 14; P=0.04).

Conclusions: Very early surgical treatment for acute ICH is difficult to achieve but feasible at academic medical centers and community hospitals. The trend toward less 3-month morbidity with surgical intervention in patients with spontaneous supratentorial ICH warrants further investigation of very early clot removal in larger randomized clinical trials.

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Comment in

  • Surgery for intracerebral hemorrhage.
    Gregson BA, Mendelow AD, Fernandes H, Pearson AJ, Siddique MS. Gregson BA, et al. Stroke. 2000 Mar;31(3):791-2. doi: 10.1161/01.str.31.3.791. Stroke. 2000. PMID: 10700746 No abstract available.

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