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Clinical Trial Summary

Non-traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) affects approximately 100,000 Americans yearly. Up to 30-50% of ICH is fatal, and those patients who survive are often left with significant neurologic dysfunction. In the past, medical management (e.g., control of hypertension, reversal of antiplatelet or anticoagulants) had been the most effective treatment for these patients, given the morbidity and mortality associated with open surgical treatment for evacuation of ICH. However, recent trials have demonstrated that minimally invasive stereotactic neurosurgical procedures to evacuate ICH are safe and result in improved outcomes for these patients. Initial attempts to evaluate the efficacy of surgical evacuation of ICH found no significant difference between medical management and standard craniotomy for surgical evacuation. Indeed, open surgery was often discouraged for these patients due to the significant morbidity and mortality associated with the surgical procedure itself. However, research has demonstrated that minimally invasive, image guided stereotactic frame-based and frameless methods are effective and safe for the placement of catheters for clot aspiration and fibrinolytic therapy of ICH in the basal ganglia and other deep seated regions. Larger randomized controlled trials have demonstrated that these minimally invasive approaches also offer clinical benefit for these patients.


Clinical Trial Description

The introduction of the ROSA stereotactic robot offers an image guided stereotactic approach with greater precision and accuracy than traditional frame-based and frameless methods. While the ROSA has never been used for the placement of intra-hemorrhage catheters, prior applications such as brain biopsies and abscess drainage represent similar surgical procedures which require the same planning, precision, and surgical technique. At the very least, ROSA offers an accurate image guided approach to deep lesions that should be comparable to competitive image guided platforms. At best, ROSA offers superior trajectory planning software, greater ease in planning multiple trajectories to large, irregular clots, and the potential for robot aided navigation into and out of the hematoma which is the greatest source of human error in these cases. For instance, the procedure often requires advancement of a larger aspiration catheter, slow aspiration as the catheter is withdrawn, and then re-advancement of a smaller catheter into the hematoma, which is left in place. The ability to advance and remove catheters in a fixed trajectory with robotic assistance may represent the greatest advantage of ROSA. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03414307
Study type Interventional
Source Zimmer Biomet
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase N/A
Start date September 30, 2020
Completion date September 30, 2020

See also
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