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GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique

BACKGROUND: Freehand ventricular catheter placement may represent limited accuracy for the surgeon's intent to achieve primary optimal catheter position. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the accuracy of a ventricular catheter guide assisted by a simple mobile health application (mhealth app) in a mult...

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Autores principales: Thomale, Ulrich-Wilhelm, Schaumann, Andreas, Stockhammer, Florian, Giese, Henrik, Schuster, Dhani, Kästner, Stefanie, Ahmadi, Alexander Sebastian, Polemikos, Manolis, Bock, Hans-Christoph, Gölz, Leonie, Lemcke, Johannes, Hermann, Elvis, Schuhmann, Martin U, Beez, Thomas, Fritsch, Michael, Orakcioglu, Berk, Vajkoczy, Peter, Rohde, Veit, Bohner, Georg
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6140776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28973670
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuros/nyx420
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author Thomale, Ulrich-Wilhelm
Schaumann, Andreas
Stockhammer, Florian
Giese, Henrik
Schuster, Dhani
Kästner, Stefanie
Ahmadi, Alexander Sebastian
Polemikos, Manolis
Bock, Hans-Christoph
Gölz, Leonie
Lemcke, Johannes
Hermann, Elvis
Schuhmann, Martin U
Beez, Thomas
Fritsch, Michael
Orakcioglu, Berk
Vajkoczy, Peter
Rohde, Veit
Bohner, Georg
author_facet Thomale, Ulrich-Wilhelm
Schaumann, Andreas
Stockhammer, Florian
Giese, Henrik
Schuster, Dhani
Kästner, Stefanie
Ahmadi, Alexander Sebastian
Polemikos, Manolis
Bock, Hans-Christoph
Gölz, Leonie
Lemcke, Johannes
Hermann, Elvis
Schuhmann, Martin U
Beez, Thomas
Fritsch, Michael
Orakcioglu, Berk
Vajkoczy, Peter
Rohde, Veit
Bohner, Georg
author_sort Thomale, Ulrich-Wilhelm
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Freehand ventricular catheter placement may represent limited accuracy for the surgeon's intent to achieve primary optimal catheter position. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the accuracy of a ventricular catheter guide assisted by a simple mobile health application (mhealth app) in a multicenter, randomized, controlled, simple blinded study (GAVCA study). METHODS: In total, 139 eligible patients were enrolled in 9 centers. Catheter placement was evaluated by 3 different components: number of ventricular cannulation attempts, a grading scale, and the anatomical position of the catheter tip. The primary endpoint was the rate of primary cannulation of grade I catheter position in the ipsilateral ventricle. The secondary endpoints were rate of intraventricular position of the catheter's perforations, early ventricular catheter failure, and complications. RESULTS: The primary endpoint was reached in 70% of the guided group vs 56.5% (freehand group; odds ratio 1.79, 95% confidence interval 0.89-3.61). The primary successful puncture rate was 100% vs 91.3% (P = .012). Catheter perforations were located completely inside the ventricle in 81.4% (guided group) and 65.2% (freehand group; odds ratio 2.34, 95% confidence interval 1.07-5.1). No differences occurred in early ventricular catheter failure, complication rate, duration of surgery, or hospital stay. CONCLUSION: The guided ventricular catheter application proved to be a safe and simple method. The primary endpoint revealed a nonsignificant improvement of optimal catheter placement among the groups. Long-term follow-up is necessary in order to evaluate differences in catheter survival among shunted patients.
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spelling pubmed-61407762018-09-25 GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique Thomale, Ulrich-Wilhelm Schaumann, Andreas Stockhammer, Florian Giese, Henrik Schuster, Dhani Kästner, Stefanie Ahmadi, Alexander Sebastian Polemikos, Manolis Bock, Hans-Christoph Gölz, Leonie Lemcke, Johannes Hermann, Elvis Schuhmann, Martin U Beez, Thomas Fritsch, Michael Orakcioglu, Berk Vajkoczy, Peter Rohde, Veit Bohner, Georg Neurosurgery Research—Human—Clinical Studies BACKGROUND: Freehand ventricular catheter placement may represent limited accuracy for the surgeon's intent to achieve primary optimal catheter position. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the accuracy of a ventricular catheter guide assisted by a simple mobile health application (mhealth app) in a multicenter, randomized, controlled, simple blinded study (GAVCA study). METHODS: In total, 139 eligible patients were enrolled in 9 centers. Catheter placement was evaluated by 3 different components: number of ventricular cannulation attempts, a grading scale, and the anatomical position of the catheter tip. The primary endpoint was the rate of primary cannulation of grade I catheter position in the ipsilateral ventricle. The secondary endpoints were rate of intraventricular position of the catheter's perforations, early ventricular catheter failure, and complications. RESULTS: The primary endpoint was reached in 70% of the guided group vs 56.5% (freehand group; odds ratio 1.79, 95% confidence interval 0.89-3.61). The primary successful puncture rate was 100% vs 91.3% (P = .012). Catheter perforations were located completely inside the ventricle in 81.4% (guided group) and 65.2% (freehand group; odds ratio 2.34, 95% confidence interval 1.07-5.1). No differences occurred in early ventricular catheter failure, complication rate, duration of surgery, or hospital stay. CONCLUSION: The guided ventricular catheter application proved to be a safe and simple method. The primary endpoint revealed a nonsignificant improvement of optimal catheter placement among the groups. Long-term follow-up is necessary in order to evaluate differences in catheter survival among shunted patients. Oxford University Press 2018-08 2017-08-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6140776/ /pubmed/28973670 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuros/nyx420 Text en © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2017. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
spellingShingle Research—Human—Clinical Studies
Thomale, Ulrich-Wilhelm
Schaumann, Andreas
Stockhammer, Florian
Giese, Henrik
Schuster, Dhani
Kästner, Stefanie
Ahmadi, Alexander Sebastian
Polemikos, Manolis
Bock, Hans-Christoph
Gölz, Leonie
Lemcke, Johannes
Hermann, Elvis
Schuhmann, Martin U
Beez, Thomas
Fritsch, Michael
Orakcioglu, Berk
Vajkoczy, Peter
Rohde, Veit
Bohner, Georg
GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique
title GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique
title_full GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique
title_fullStr GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique
title_full_unstemmed GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique
title_short GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique
title_sort gavca study: randomized, multicenter trial to evaluate the quality of ventricular catheter placement with a mobile health assisted guidance technique
topic Research—Human—Clinical Studies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6140776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28973670
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuros/nyx420
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