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UnknownNCT05567341

Remote Ischemic Preconditioning in Vestibular Schwannoma Surgery

Remote Ischemic Preconditioning in Vestibular Schwannoma Surgery and Its Neuroprotective Effect on the Cochlear and Facial Nerve Function

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital Tuebingen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Vestibular schwannomas are primarily benign (WHO grade I) tumors originating from the Schwann cells of the vestibular nerve and are among the most common tumors of the skull base. Common treatment options are surgical tumor resection or targeted radiation therapy. The special challenge of surgical treatment is the functional preservation of the cranial nerves, especially the cochlear and facial nerves. Perioperative ischemia of the cochlea and cochlear nerve is postulated as the underlying mechanism of postoperative hearing loss. Ischemic preconditioning is a non-invasive procedure that triggers the release of vasoactive cytokines and mediators by repeated short-term induction of limb ischemia. Improved perfusion of critically perfused end organs as well as a reduction of cerebral infarct volumes has already been shown in other pathologies. In the planned study, possible neuroprotective effects of remote ischemic preconditioning on postoperative hearing as well as facial nerve function in patients with vestibular schwannomas will be examined.

Detailed description

Purpose: Does remote ischemic preconditioning improve hearing and/or facial nerve palsy after resection of vestibular schwannomas? Study Design: Prospective, randomized, double-blind, single-center. Case number: The study should include 120 patients (60 treatment arm, 60 control arm). Case number calculation (mean effect sizes, chi-square test, alpha error = 0.05, beta error = 20%) results in a necessary total patient number of 100 with 50 patients per group. Including the expected dropout rate (approx. 20%), the required total number of study participants is set at 120 patients. With approximately 55 patients/year in whom anatomic preservation of the cochlear nerve is possible intraoperatively, the total study duration is estimated to be approximately 2-2.5 years. Study procedure: Day 1 * Preoperative pure tone audiometry including speech discrimination and preoperative AEP measurement * preoperative assessment of facial nerve function according to House and Brackmann and photo documentation * Preoperative blood sample (Hg, WBC, platelet count, creatinine, sodium, potassium, CRP, PCT, IL-6, INR, Quick, aPTT, d-dimer) * Evaluation of inclusion and exclusion criteria, informed consent Day 2 * Randomization * At skin incision RIC procedure or sham control. * RIC arm: 5 minutes inflation of a blood pressure cuff to 200mmHg on the right arm, then 5 minutes rest, the procedure will be performed 4 times in total. * Control arm: 5 minutes inflation of a blood pressure cuff to 0mmHg on the right arm, then 5 minutes rest, the procedure will be performed 4 times in total. * Performance of tumor resection under electrophysiological monitoring. * blood sample (Hg, WBC, platelet count, creatinine, sodium, potassium, CRP, PCT, IL-6, INR, Quick, aPTT, d-dimer) Day 3 * blood sample (Hg, WBC, platelet count, creatinine, sodium, potassium, CRP, PCT, IL-6, INR, Quick, aPTT, d-dimer) * Clinical assessment of facial nerve function * Evaluation of complications Before discharge * Clinical assessment of facial nerve function and photo documentation * Evaluation of complications occurring in the course of the procedure * Postoperative AEP measurement and pure tone audiometry incl. speech discrimination Outpatient follow-up after 3 months * Evaluation of postoperative pure tone audiometry incl. speech discrimination * Clinical assessment of facial nerve function and photo documentation Objective: Primary outcome: patients undergoing RIC will show better hearing 3 months postoperatively than the sham control group. Secondary outcome hypothesis: patients undergoing RIC will show better postoperative facial nerve function than the sham control group before discharge and 3 months postoperatively.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURERemote ischemic preconditioningA blood pressure cuff is inflated to 200 mmHg for 4x5 min (5 min rest between cycles) at the right upper extremity when the vestibular schwannoma surgery is started
PROCEDURESham-controlA blood pressure cuff is inflated to 0 mmHg for 4x5 min (5 min rest between cycles) at the right upper extremity when the vestibular schwannoma surgery is started

Timeline

Start date
2022-10-01
Primary completion
2025-01-01
Completion
2025-01-01
First posted
2022-10-05
Last updated
2022-10-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05567341. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.