International Practice Variability in Treatment of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Survey Development
2.2. Statistical Analyses
3. Results
3.1. Center Characteristics
3.2. Aneurysm Treatment
3.3. Fluid Management
3.4. Cerebral Vasospasm and Delayed Cerebral Ischemia
4. Discussion
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Center Characteristic | n Completed | n (%), Mean (SD) or Median (IQR)—Range |
---|---|---|
Centers per region | 145 | |
United States | 64 (44) | |
Europe | 37 (26) | |
Other | 44 (30) | |
Type of institution | 145 | |
Academic | 121 (84) | |
Private non-academic | 11 (8) | |
Public non-academic | 8 (6) | |
Other | 5 (4) | |
No. of hospital beds | 144 | |
<250 | 11 (8) | |
250–500 | 24 (17) | |
500–750 | 32 (22) | |
750–1000 | 41 (28) | |
>1000 | 36 (25) | |
No. of intensive care unit (ICU) beds | 144 | 60 (33–100)—380 |
0–100 | 109 (76) | |
101–200 | 32 (22) | |
201–300 | 1 (1) | |
301–400 | 2 (1) | |
No. of neurological ICU beds | 139 | 15 (8–24)—48 |
0–10 | 56 (39) | |
11–20 | 39 (27) | |
21–30 | 33 (23) | |
31–40 | 6 (4) | |
40> | 4 (3) | |
How many patients per year do you see with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) at your center? | 145 | |
0–40 | 5 (3) | |
40–60 | 25 (17) | |
60–100 | 17 (12) | |
100–150 | 12 (8) | |
150–200 | 14 (10) | |
>200 | 72 (50) | |
What percentage of patients with aSAH present primarily to your hospital—as opposed to referred patients? | 142 | 47 (27) |
0–25% | 39 (27) | |
26–50% | 50 (35) | |
51–75% | 24 (17) | |
76–100% | 29 (20) | |
Where are aSAH patients admitted?* | 145 | |
Dedicated Neurological ICU | 96 (66) | |
Surgical ICU | 15 (10) | |
Medical ICU | 9 (6) | |
Medical-Surgical ICU | 36 (25) | |
Intermediate Care Unit | 18 (12) | |
Other | 11 (8) |
Aneurysm Treatment Characteristic | n Completed | Mean Estimate (SD), n (%) |
---|---|---|
Proportion of aneurysms treated by endovascular coiling | 130 | 65% (26) |
Timing of aneurysm treatment | ||
Proportion of aneurysm treatment <24 h from symptom onset † | 145 | 65 (30) |
Proportion of aneurysm treatment 24–48 h from symptom onset † | 145 | 18 (16) |
Proportion of aneurysm treatment >48 h from symptom onset † | 145 | 8 (12) |
Number of centers that treat the majority (>50%) of aneurysms in particular time window from symptom onset * | 145 | |
Within 24 h from symptom onset | 96 (66) | |
Within 24–48 h from symptom onset | 7 (5) | |
Within 48–72 h from symptom onset | 3 (2) |
Aneurysm treatment characteristic | Europe (EU) Mean % (SD) | United States (US) Mean % (SD) | Other * Mean % (SD) | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aneurysms treated endovascular | 70 (18) | 72 (19) | 51 (33) | EU vs. other p < 0.01; US vs. other p < 0.001 |
Aneurysms treated <24 h † | 67 (24) | 77 (23) | 46 (34) | EU vs. other p < 0.01; US vs. other p < 0.001 |
Aneurysms treated ≥24 h † | 30 (21) | 22 (22) | 30 (24) | 0.109 |
Fluid Management Characteristic | n Completed | n (%) |
---|---|---|
What is the goal of maintenance intravenous fluids in aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) in your hospital? | 142 | |
Euvolemia | 136 (96) | |
Hypervolemia | 5 (3) | |
Other | 1 (1) | |
What goal of net fluid balance for aSAH patients do you use at your institution? | 124 | |
−500 mL/day | 0 | |
0 mL/day | 66 (53) | |
+500 mL/day | 51 (41) | |
+1 L/day | 2 (2) | |
Other | 5 (4) | |
What goal of fluid intake for aSAH patients do you use at your institution? | 122 | |
1 L/day | 11 (9) | |
2 L/day | 66 (54) | |
3 L/day | 0 | |
>3.5 L/day | 2 (2) | |
Other | 43 (35) | |
Does your center use clinical blood tests to guide fluid management of aSAH patients? | 141 | |
Yes | 69 (49) | |
No | 72 (51) | |
Which? * | 69 | |
Troponin | 30 (44) | |
B-type (or brain) natriuretic peptide | 31 (45) | |
Neuron-specific enolase | 3 (4) | |
Interleukin 6 | 2 (3) | |
Lactate | 56 (81) | |
Others | 9 (13) | |
Which maintenance fluids do you use for aSAH patients in your hospital?* | 118 | |
0.9% saline | 101 (86) | |
3% saline | 1 (1) | |
5% human albumin | 11 (9) | |
20% human albumin | 3 (3) | |
25% human albumin | 4 (3) | |
Synthetic colloid | 1 (1) | |
Balanced solutions | 59 (50) | |
Other | 2 (2) | |
Do you use advanced hemodynamic monitoring to guide fluid management at the intensive care unit? | 128 | |
Yes | 108 (84) | |
No | 20 (16) | |
How often? | 105 | |
<10% of patients | 18 (17) | |
10–25% of patients | 40 (38) | |
>25% of patients | 47 (45) | |
With what device? * | 110 | |
Echocardiography/Inferior vena cava | 85 (77) | |
Pulmonary artery catheter | 11 (10) | |
Transpulmonary thermodilution | 53 (48) | |
Other | 29 (26) |
DCI Management Characteristic | n Completed | Europe (EU) n, (%) | United States (US) n, (%) | Other * n, (%) | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Do you routinely administer nimodipine to patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH)? | 139 | 35 (97) | 62 (100) | 39 (95) | 0.238 |
Do you use induced hypertension when aSAH patients develop delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI)? | 141 | 32 (87) | 62 (100) | 34 (81) | US vs. other p < 0.05; US vs. EU p < 0.05 |
Do you induce hypervolemia when aSAH patients develop DCI? | 142 | 6 (16) | 19 (30) | 12 (29) | 0.280 |
Do you induce hemodilution when aSAH patients develop DCI? | 123 | 2 (6) | 6 (12) | 6 (16) | 0.391 |
Does your center use biomarkers or laboratory tests to guide DCI management? | 124 | 9 (26) | 14 (26) | 5 (14) | 0.289 |
Do you perform endovascular therapies when vasospasm is shown on cerebral angiography? | 124 | 25 (74) | 48 (91) | 22 (60) | US vs. other p < 0.05 |
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de Winkel, J.; van der Jagt, M.; Lingsma, H.F.; Roozenbeek, B.; Calvillo, E.; Chou, S.H.-Y.; Dziedzic, P.H.; Etminan, N.; Huang, J.; Ko, N.U.; et al. International Practice Variability in Treatment of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. J. Clin. Med. 2021, 10, 762. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10040762
de Winkel J, van der Jagt M, Lingsma HF, Roozenbeek B, Calvillo E, Chou SH-Y, Dziedzic PH, Etminan N, Huang J, Ko NU, et al. International Practice Variability in Treatment of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2021; 10(4):762. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10040762
Chicago/Turabian Stylede Winkel, Jordi, Mathieu van der Jagt, Hester F. Lingsma, Bob Roozenbeek, Eusebia Calvillo, Sherry H-Y. Chou, Peter H. Dziedzic, Nima Etminan, Judy Huang, Nerissa U. Ko, and et al. 2021. "International Practice Variability in Treatment of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage" Journal of Clinical Medicine 10, no. 4: 762. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10040762
APA Stylede Winkel, J., van der Jagt, M., Lingsma, H. F., Roozenbeek, B., Calvillo, E., Chou, S. H. -Y., Dziedzic, P. H., Etminan, N., Huang, J., Ko, N. U., Loch MacDonald, R., Martin, R. L., Potu, N. R., Venkatasubba Rao, C. P., Vergouwen, M. D. I., & Suarez, J. I. (2021). International Practice Variability in Treatment of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 10(4), 762. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10040762