Duroplasty for injured cervical spinal cord with uncontrolled swelling: protocol of the DISCUS randomized controlled trial

Author:

Saadoun Samira1ORCID,Grassner Lukas2,Belci Maurizio3,Cook Jonathan4,Knight Ruth5,Davies Lucy6,Asif Hasan7,Visagan Ravindran7,Gallagher Mathew7,Thome Claudius8,Hutchinson Peter9,Zoumprouli Argyro7,Wade Julia10,Farrar Nicola10,Papadopoulos Marios C7

Affiliation:

1. St George's University of London Division of Cellular and Molecular Medicine: St George's University of London Molecular and Clinical Sciences Research Institute

2. Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg: Paracelsus Medizinische Privatuniversitat

3. Buckinghamshire Hospitals NHS Trust: Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust

4. Botnar Research Centre

5. University of Liverpool

6. SITU: Surgical and Interventional Trials Unit

7. St George's University of London

8. Medical University of Innsbruck: Medizinische Universitat Innsbruck

9. University of Cambridge

10. University of Bristol

Abstract

Abstract Background Cervical traumatic spinal cord injury is a devastating condition. Current management (bony decompression) may be inadequate as after acute severe TSCI, the swollen spinal cord may become compressed against the surrounding tough membrane, the dura. DISCUS will test the hypothesis that, after acute, severe traumatic cervical spinal cord injury, the addition of dural decompression to bony decompression improves muscle strength in the limbs at six months, compared with bony decompression alone. Methods This is a prospective, phase III, multicenter, randomized controlled superiority trial. We aim to recruit 222 adults with acute, severe, traumatic cervical spinal cord injury with an American spinal injury association Impairment Scale grade A, B or C who will be randomized 1:1 to undergo bony decompression alone or bony decompression with duroplasty. Patients and outcome assessors are blinded to study arm. The primary outcome is change in the motor score at six months vs. admission; secondary outcomes assess function (grasp, walking, urinary + anal sphincters), quality of life, complications, need for further surgery and mortality, at 6 months and 12 months from randomization. A subgroup of at least 50 patients (25/arm) also has observational monitoring from the injury site using a pressure probe (intraspinal pressure, spinal cord perfusion pressure) and/or microdialysis catheter (cord metabolism: tissue glucose, lactate, pyruvate, lactate to pyruvate ratio, glutamate, glycerol; cord inflammation: tissue chemokines/cytokines). Patients are recruited from the U.K. and internationally, with UK recruitment supported by an integrated QuinteT recruitment intervention to optimize recruitment and informed consent processes. Estimated study duration is 72 months (6 months set-up, 48 months recruitment, 12 months to complete follow-up, 6 months data analysis and reporting results). Discussion We anticipate that the addition of duroplasty to standard of care will improve muscle strength; this has benefits for patients and carers, as well as substantial gains for health services and society including economic implications. If the addition of duroplasty to standard treatment is beneficial, it is anticipated that duroplasty will become standard of care. Trial registration: IRAS: 292031 (England, Wales, Northern Ireland), 296518 (Scotland); ISRCTN: 25573423; Clinicaltrials.gov Number: NCT04936620; NIHR CRN 48627.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference36 articles.

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2. Saadoun S, Papadopoulos MC. Acute, Severe Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: Monitoring from the Injury Site and Expansion Duraplasty. Neurosurg Clin N Am. 2021;32:365 – 76. https://doi.10.1016/j.nec.2021.03.008.

3. Donovan JL, Rooshenas L, Jepson M, Elliott D, Wade J, Avery K, et al. Optimising recruitment and informed consent in randomised controlled trials: the development and implementation of the Quintet Recruitment Intervention (QRI). Trials. 2016;17:283-4. https://doi.10.1186/s13063-016-1391-4 [doi].

4. Aimetti AA, Kirshblum S, Curt A, Mobley J, Grossman RG, Guest JD. Natural history of neurological improvement following complete (AIS A) thoracic spinal cord injury across three registries to guide acute clinical trial design and interpretation. Spinal Cord. 2019;57:753 – 62. https://doi.10.1038/s41393-019-0299-8.

5. Lee BA, Leiby BE, Marino RJ. Neurological and functional recovery after thoracic spinal cord injury. J Spinal Cord Med. 2016;39:67–76. https://doi.10.1179/2045772314Y.0000000280.

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