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GAVCA Study: Randomized, Multicenter Trial to Evaluate the Quality of Ventricular Catheter Placement with a Mobile Health Assisted Guidance Technique
Date Issued
2018-08-01
Author(s)
Thomale, Ulrich-Wilhelm
Schaumann, Andreas
Giese, Henrik
Schuster, Dhani
Kästner, Stefanie
Ahmadi, Sebastian A.
Polemikos, Manolis
Gölz, Leonie
Lemcke, Johannes
Hermann, Elvis
Schuhmann, Martin
Beez, Thomas
Fritsch, Michael
Orakcioglu, Berk
Vajkoczy, Peter
Bohner, Georg
DOI
10.1093/neuros/nyx420
Abstract
Freehand ventricular catheter placement may represent limited accuracy for the surgeon's intent to achieve primary optimal catheter position.To investigate the accuracy of a ventricular catheter guide assisted by a simple mobile health application (mhealth app) in a multicenter, randomized, controlled, simple blinded study (GAVCA study). In total, 139 eligible patients were enrolled in 9 centers. Catheter placement was evaluated by 3 different components: number of ventricular cannulation attempts, a grading scale, and the anatomical position of the catheter tip. The primary endpoint was the rate of primary cannulation of grade I catheter position in the ipsilateral ventricle. The secondary endpoints were rate of intraventricular position of the catheter's perforations, early ventricular catheter failure, and complications. The primary endpoint was reached in 70% of the guided group vs 56.5% (freehand group; odds ratio 1.79, 95% confidence interval 0.89-3.61). The primary successful puncture rate was 100% vs 91.3% (P = .012). Catheter perforations were located completely inside the ventricle in 81.4% (guided group) and 65.2% (freehand group; odds ratio 2.34, 95% confidence interval 1.07-5.1). No differences occurred in early ventricular catheter failure, complication rate, duration of surgery, or hospital stay. The guided ventricular catheter application proved to be a safe and simple method. The primary endpoint revealed a nonsignificant improvement of optimal catheter placement among the groups. Long-term follow-up is necessary in order to evaluate differences in catheter survival among shunted patients.