Neurological Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Feasibility Study of a Novel Combined Automated EMG and SSEP Device (EPAD® 2.0) for Intraoperative Monitoring of Spinal Nerve Roots and Spinal Cord Function During Spine Surgery
In patients undergoing spine surgery, spinal nerve roots and spinal cord are vulnerable to surgical insults especially for instrumentation and may lead to long term sequelae. The incidence of clinical peripheral neuropathy after cervical spine surgery has been reported up to 30%. Intraoperatively, spinal cord and nerves function can be monitored using electromyography (EMG) and somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEP) and thereby, intervention can be made to potentially reduce the incidence of adverse neurological sequelae. However, conventional EMG and SSEP monitoring requires presence of a trained EP technician, use of needle electrodes and currently bulky EP equipment and is thus not practical for routine clinical usage. In this study, the invesitgators will assess the clinical feasibility of using a novel miniaturized and automated EMG/SSEP device (EPAD® 2.0) in spine surgical patients.
Purpose of Research: This study is a pilot study designed to assess the ability of a novel
automated EMG/SSEP device (EPAD® 2.0) to detect intraoperative spinal nerve roots injury in
patients undergoing spine procedures. The specific aims are:
1. to assess the clinical utility of using the EPAD® 2.0 automated device and its algorithm
in monitoring spine surgery patients.
2. to identify any practical limitation of using EPAD® 2.0 automated device in spine
surgery patients.
Hypothesis: the novel automated EPAD® 2.0 EMG/SSEP device is easy to use and apply in spine
surgery patients
BACKGROUND Surgical injuries to the spinal nerve roots or spinal cords are not infrequent in
spine surgery and the consequence can be devastating. Injured patients might present with
radiculopathy, motor weakness, spinal cord compression, and postoperative neuropathic pain.
In cervical spine surgery, cervical nerve roots injuries especially fifth cervical (C5) nerve
root are not uncommon complications, potentially resulting in upper extremity paralysis. The
incidence of C5 nerve root injury ranged to as high as 30%. The other spinal nerve roots
(C6-8) can suffer from the same surgical injuries during the procedure but with much lower
reported incidence than C5. Spinal nerve injuries typically occur during decompression for
cervical myelopathy in both anterior and posterior approaches. In lumbosacral spine surgery,
a recent review of the neurological injury found a pooled incidence of 5.7% (56 of 2783
patients; range: 0.46-24%), in which pedicle malposition accounted for one-fifth of the
injuries.
A multimodality monitoring such as SSEP and EMG can be used in spine surgery to allow
comprehensive monitoring of the spinal cord and nerve roots function and an attempt to reduce
the risks of surgical injuries. Although the idea of closely monitoring of spinal cord and
nerve roots function during high-risk cervical spine instrumentation procedure is appealing,
the utilization of intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring is limited. One reason is the
current requirements for a trained technician and for electrode placement and observation of
monitoring SSSEP signals, the requirement for the use of needle electrodes for SSEP
monitoring and specific training for a neurophysiologist in the interpretation of SSEP
signals.
In attempt to resolve this problem, the investigators has been involved in developing an
automated SSEP device (EPAD®, SafeOp Surgical, Hunt Valley, MD; FDA approved). The automated
EPAD1.0 SSEP device the investigators are currently utilizing is miniaturized and
incorporates a proprietary technology utilizing non-invasive electrode patches (rather than
needle electrodes) and is based on an automated algorithm derived from real-time SSEP
monitoring of over 100,000 surgical procedures. The investigators was the first to evaluate
the clinical utility of this automated SSEP device in cardiac surgical and total shoulder
arthroplasty patients. These pilot studies found that automated SSEP monitoring can be
performed readily in a busy cardiac operating room, as well as in orthopedic surgery. The raw
signal quality is reliable and comparable to the conventional SSEP machine. These results
indicate that this device can eliminate the practical challenges of performing SSEP
monitoring and confirmed its feasibility for routine use. The initial experience has enabled
further development that has incorporated software updates based on off-line
data-reiteration. This has also allowed progressive refinement of the automated analysis
algorithm based on this recently acquired intraoperative SSEP data to progressively optimize
the software for improved signal acquisition, enhanced artifact rejection and electrocautery
suppression.
METHOD Study Design This will be a prospective cohort study aiming in assessing the ability
of a novel automated EMG/SSEP device (EPAD® 2.0) to detect intraoperative spinal nerve root
injury in patients undergoing spine procedures. All protocol procedures will be undertaken;
however, as this is the first clinical trial of EPAD® 2.0, the initial series of up to 30
patients will be used for feasibility anticipating some possible minor software revisions and
minor equipment modifications. Additionally, data obtained from this initial series of
patients may be utilized to iteratively refine the data collection and analysis algorithms.
Standard Procedure After obtaining preoperative written consent, a brief neurological exam
will be conducted. As is conventional, anesthesia will be induced using opioid/propofol and
will be maintained with halogenated anesthetic agents and supplemented with an infusion of
remifentanil at 0.01-0.2 mcg/kg/min or sufentanil at 0.15 to 0.5g/kg/hr. Muscle relaxants
will only be given for intubation and no second dose will be given to enable EMG monitoring.
After anesthesia induction with airway and vascular access secured, the patient will be
positioned for the surgery. There is no change in routine (or standard) of care except the
investigators will attach the EPAD 2.0 device to the patients. After the surgery, the patient
will be extubated and transferred to PACU. In all patients, a complete neurological exam will
be performed in PACU.
Study Procedure:
For SSEP monitoring, surface adhesive electrodes will be used for both stimulation and
recording. Stimulating electrodes will be placed for stimulation of the dermatome that is at
risk of injury (e.g. C5), median nerve or posterior tibal nerve. Recording surface electrodes
will be placed on the cervical spine at the C2 level (C2), and the reference electrode was
placed on the forehead. The pre-set stimulation frequency in the EPAD device is 4.7 Hz with a
300- microsecond pulse set at 50 to 70 mA and the signal averaging set at 300 cycles. After
an automatic impedance check, the baseline subcortical SSEP will be established at the
beginning of each case, and the amplitude and latency of the waveforms will be measured. The
EPAD device automatically established the baselines.
For EMG monitoring, 6 Surface electrodes will be attached to the same muscle groups of the
conventional intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring machine. The underlying skin will
be prepared with 3M EKG skin abrasive tape (3M red dot 2236) to reduce the skin impedance. In
each case, the Compound Muscle Action Potentials (CMAPs) of each muscle group will be
monitored. The EMG monitoring can provide three main functions in spine surgery, which
includes free-run EMG for detecting mechanical irritation to nerve root, triggered EMG for
nerve root identification and pedicle screw placement assessment. All three EMG functions
will be evaluated in this study.
Short Summary of Study Protocol:
1. Written informed consent
2. Focused neurological exam preoperatively
3. Placement of surface electrodes in OR
4. Monitoring during the spine procedure to determine the agreement of EPAD® 2.0 with the
conventional intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring.
5. Postoperative focused neurological exam in PACU postoperatively by blinded observer
6. Data analysis/interpretation/presentation/publication
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