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RecruitingNCT06163547

Middle Meningeal Artery Embolization for Chronic Subdural Hematomas (STORMM)

Middle Meningeal Artery (MMA) Embolization for cSDH: Rationale and Design for the STOp Recurrence of MMA Bleeding (STORMM) Randomized-Control Trial

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
180 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Geneva · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Chronic Subdural Hematomas (cSHD) are common, and due to cerebral compression, often result in neurological impairment and reduced consciousness. Surgery is typically performed once neurological symptoms develop. Recent studies suggest that arteries nourished by the middle meningeal artery (MMA) may be responsible for hematoma progression and that MMA embolization is clinically useful. There is less evidence, that embolization of MMA also may be a treatment option for individuals without surgical treatment. The investigators propose a multicentre study to investigate both potentials: (1) Assessment of efficacy of embolization after surgery to reduce recurrence and improve outcomes by conducting a randomized trial (randomization arms; Arms 1 and 2), (2) Assessment of embolization-alone efficacy when surgery is contraindicated or refused (embolization-only arm, Arms 3 and 4).

Detailed description

Evidence to support the benefit of MMA embolization remains limited and the risk-benefit balance remains unclear. Case series have shown that recurrence rates with embolization are much lower, and that embolization is generally very safe. Risks associated with neurointerventional procedures will be directly discussed with patients or their caretakers as part of the conventional consenting procedure. Risks include access site hematoma, radiation exposure, vascular injury, brain ischemia, death (theoretic and extremely unlikely) and typical risks associated with general or local anaesthesia. The potential efficacy of MMA embolization as a treatment therefore requires higher level evidence in the form of randomized control trials. The benefit of the embolization is a substantial reduction in recurrence of cSDH, which has been reported to be as high 1 in 3-4 patients. Recurrence of cSDH can lead to additional surgery and complications. First objective: Evaluate the recurrence rates of cSDH after combined surgical and MMA embolization treatments (Arm 2) versus surgery alone (Arms 1). Second objective: The second objective is to evaluate the stability and regression of cSDH after for all the Arms of the study at follow-up.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
RADIATIONMMA embolizationMiddle meningeal artery embolization

Timeline

Start date
2025-02-18
Primary completion
2027-01-01
Completion
2027-01-01
First posted
2023-12-11
Last updated
2026-03-17

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06163547. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.