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Minimally Invasive Surgery vs Medical Management Alone for Intracerebral Hemorrhage ; The MIND Randomized Clinical Trial

Title: Minimally Invasive Surgery vs Medical Management Alone for Intracerebral Hemorrhage ; The MIND Randomized Clinical Trial
Authors: Arthur, Adam S.; Jahromi, Babak S.; Saphier, Paul S.; Nickele, Christopher M.; Ryan, Robert W.; Vajkoczy, Peter; Schirmer, Clemens M.; Kellner, Christopher P.; Matouk, Charles C.; Arias, Eric J.; Ullman, Jamie S.; Levitt, Michael R.; Hage, Ziad A.; Fiorella, David J.; Paulon, Giorgio; Quintana, Melanie; Detry, Michelle A.; Bosse, Anna; Norbash, Alexander; Derdeyn, Colin P.; Schwamm, Lee H.; Hamilton, Scott; Meyers, Philip M.; Ducruet, Andrew; Gupta, Rishi; Woodward, Keith B.; Gutti, Padmaja; Metcalf-Doetsch, William; Potts, Matthew; Sachdeva, Kapil; Benitez, Ronald; Dashti, Reza; Gu, Eugene; Wirkowski, Elzbieta; Alsherbini, Khalid; Dawkins, Demi; Dornbos, David; Elijovich, Lucas; Goyal, Nitin; Heiferman, Daniel; Hoit, Daniel; Inoa, Violiza; Johnson, Kendrick; Khan, Nickalus; Moore, Kenneth; Mulpur, Bhageeradh; Nguyen, Vincent; Peterson, Jeremy; Torabi, Radmehr; Zamora, Mario
Source: JAMA Neurology ; volume 82, issue 11, page 1113 ; ISSN 2168-6149
Publisher Information: American Medical Association (AMA)
Publication Year: 2025
Description: Importance It remains uncertain whether surgical evacuation improves functional outcomes in patients with supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Objective To compare the safety and efficacy of minimally invasive surgery with the Artemis Neuro Evacuation Device to guideline-based medical management alone for spontaneous supratentorial ICH. Design, Setting, and Participants The MIND open-label, multicenter randomized clinical trial randomized patients with spontaneous supratentorial ICH in a 2:1 ratio to either minimally invasive surgery or medical management alone. Participants were enrolled at 32 participating global sites between February 6, 2018, and August 28, 2023. This article reports on the primary trial outcome. Of 4066 eligible adult patients (aged 18-80 years) with moderate- to large-volume supratentorial ICH (20-80 mL), baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score of 6 or higher, and Glasgow Coma Scale score between 5 and 15, 154 were randomized to minimally invasive surgery and 82 to medical management. Data were analyzed from February to September 2024. Intervention Minimally invasive surgery (within 72 hours of symptom onset) plus medical management or medical management alone. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary efficacy outcome was 180-day combined death and disability via ordinal modified Rankin Scale score (range, 0 [no symptoms] to 6 [death]). The primary safety outcome was 30-day mortality. Results Following an independent feasibility analysis prompted by the publication of positive results of a contemporaneous ICH trial, enrollment was stopped early at 236 participants. Overall median (IQR) participant age was 60 (50-70) years, 87 participants (36.9%) were female, 164 (69.5%) had primarily deep bleeds, and 72 (30.5%) had primarily lobar bleeds. Efficacy results of the primary model analysis suggested lack of evidence for the superiority of minimally invasive surgery over medical management (odds ratio [OR], 1.03; 96% CI, 0.62-1.72; P = .45). The adjusted model’s mean ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2025.3151
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaneurol.2025.3151; https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaneurology/articlepdf/2838201/jamaneurology_arthur_2025_oi_250058_1762755375.46834.pdf
Accession Number: edsbas.FD7C80CC
Database: BASE