Intracranial multimodal monitoring in neurocritical care (Neurocore-iMMM): an open, decentralized consensus.
Détails
ID Serval
serval:BIB_6934F0370F5F
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Intracranial multimodal monitoring in neurocritical care (Neurocore-iMMM): an open, decentralized consensus.
Périodique
Critical care
Collaborateur⸱rice⸱s
Neurocore-iMMM Research Group
Contributeur⸱rice⸱s
Al Barajraji M., Alb I., Amorim E., Appavu B., Balanca B., Barrit S., Ben-Hamouda N., Bernard F., Carrabba G.G., Chabanne R., Citerio G., Hadwe S.E., Foreman B., Gilmore E., Gonzalez M.I., Guenego A., Hajdu S.D., Helbok R., Hutchinson PJA, Jurjans K., Kirschen M.P., Lagares A., Lazaridis C., Levine J.M., Luoto T.M., Marklund N., Massager N., Mazeraud A., Messerer M., Montellano F., Ngwenya L.B., Niset A., Park S., Pinggera D., Rass V., Remacle T.Y., Robba C., Rodriguez S.A., Shutter L., Taccone F.S., Terpolilli N.A., Torcida Sedano N., Tsitsopoulos P.P., Van Essen T.A., Vlahovic D., Waziri A., Willms J.F., Younsi A.
ISSN
1466-609X (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1364-8535
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
20/12/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
28
Numéro
1
Pages
427
Langue
anglais
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Review
Publication Status: epublish
Publication Status: epublish
Résumé
Intracranial multimodal monitoring (iMMM) is increasingly used in neurocritical care, but a lack of standardization hinders its evidence-based development. Here, we devised core outcome sets (COS) and reporting guidelines to harmonize iMMM practices and research.
An open, decentralized, three-round Delphi consensus study involved experts between December 2023 and June 2024. Items-spanning three domains: (i) patient characteristics, (ii) practices, and (iii) outcomes-with ≥ 75% agreement were classified as strong agreement, while those with 50-75% were reconsidered in subsequent rounds, requiring ≥ 66% for moderate agreement.
An international, multidisciplinary panel comprised 58 neurocritical physicians and researchers with low attrition (12%). They were predominantly from Western regions (96%), actively involved in iMMM (82%), at least weekly (72.4%), with more than 10 years of specific experience (57%). Of the 127 items assessed for inclusion in COS and reporting guidelines, 45 (35.4%) reached strong and 8 (6.3%) moderate agreement. Main strong agreement items were: (i) demographics: age (98%) and sex/gender (90%); comorbidities: coagulation/platelet disorders (95%); initial scoring: Glasgow Coma Scale (97%) and pathology-specific scores (90%); active treatments: antithrombotics (95%) (ii) clinical practice: iMMM implantation indications (98%) and iMMM-guided interventions (91%); surgical practice: targeting strategies (97%) and concomitant external ventricular drainage (97%); technical details: recording modalities (98%); (iii) monitoring parameters: duration (97%) and triggered interventions (95%); standardized outcome reporting (93%); surgical complications (e.g., postoperative intracranial hemorrhages, CNS infections, and probe misplacement, all > 90%) and adverse events (accidental dislodgement, probe breakage, and technical malfunctions, all > 90%).
This consensus establishes foundational COS and reporting guidelines for iMMM in neurocritical care. These harmonization tools can enhance research quality, comparability, and reproducibility, facilitating evidence-based practices for this emerging technology. However, challenges remain in developing purpose-specific guidelines and adapting them to diverse clinical and research settings.
An open, decentralized, three-round Delphi consensus study involved experts between December 2023 and June 2024. Items-spanning three domains: (i) patient characteristics, (ii) practices, and (iii) outcomes-with ≥ 75% agreement were classified as strong agreement, while those with 50-75% were reconsidered in subsequent rounds, requiring ≥ 66% for moderate agreement.
An international, multidisciplinary panel comprised 58 neurocritical physicians and researchers with low attrition (12%). They were predominantly from Western regions (96%), actively involved in iMMM (82%), at least weekly (72.4%), with more than 10 years of specific experience (57%). Of the 127 items assessed for inclusion in COS and reporting guidelines, 45 (35.4%) reached strong and 8 (6.3%) moderate agreement. Main strong agreement items were: (i) demographics: age (98%) and sex/gender (90%); comorbidities: coagulation/platelet disorders (95%); initial scoring: Glasgow Coma Scale (97%) and pathology-specific scores (90%); active treatments: antithrombotics (95%) (ii) clinical practice: iMMM implantation indications (98%) and iMMM-guided interventions (91%); surgical practice: targeting strategies (97%) and concomitant external ventricular drainage (97%); technical details: recording modalities (98%); (iii) monitoring parameters: duration (97%) and triggered interventions (95%); standardized outcome reporting (93%); surgical complications (e.g., postoperative intracranial hemorrhages, CNS infections, and probe misplacement, all > 90%) and adverse events (accidental dislodgement, probe breakage, and technical malfunctions, all > 90%).
This consensus establishes foundational COS and reporting guidelines for iMMM in neurocritical care. These harmonization tools can enhance research quality, comparability, and reproducibility, facilitating evidence-based practices for this emerging technology. However, challenges remain in developing purpose-specific guidelines and adapting them to diverse clinical and research settings.
Mots-clé
Humans, Critical Care/methods, Critical Care/standards, Consensus, Delphi Technique, Monitoring, Physiologic/methods, Monitoring, Physiologic/standards, Male, Female, Brain tissue oxygenation, ICP, Intracranial multimodal monitoring, Intracranial pressure, MNM, Microdialysis, Multimodal neuromonitoring, Neurocritical care, Pbto2, iMMM
Pubmed
Open Access
Oui
Création de la notice
21/12/2024 23:08
Dernière modification de la notice
22/12/2024 7:09