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The potential for minimally invasive intracerebral hemorrhage evacuation in routine healthcare : applicability of the ENRICH trial criteria to an unselected cohort

Apostolaki-Hansson, Trine LU orcid ; Hillal, Amir LU ; Göransson, Nathanael LU ; Hansen, Björn M. LU orcid ; Norrving, Bo LU ; Ramgren, Birgitta LU ; Wassélius, Johan LU and Ullberg, Teresa LU (2024) In Frontiers in Stroke 3. p.01-08
Abstract

Objective: Following the favorable outcomes demonstrated by the Early MiNimally-invasive Removal of IntraCerebral Hemorrhage (ENRICH) trial in supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) patients treated with minimally invasive surgery (MIS), and considering the increasing interest in MIS, we aimed to assess the potential eligibility rate for ICH patients in Sweden. Methods: All patients with spontaneous ICH in the Swedish Stroke Register (RS) during 2017–2020 in Skane county (1.37 million) were assessed. Baseline imaging was used for radiological characterization. Clinical data were obtained from RS. MIS eligibility in the total ICH population meeting ENRICH criteria were estimated and extrapolated to the Swedish population (10.5... (More)

Objective: Following the favorable outcomes demonstrated by the Early MiNimally-invasive Removal of IntraCerebral Hemorrhage (ENRICH) trial in supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) patients treated with minimally invasive surgery (MIS), and considering the increasing interest in MIS, we aimed to assess the potential eligibility rate for ICH patients in Sweden. Methods: All patients with spontaneous ICH in the Swedish Stroke Register (RS) during 2017–2020 in Skane county (1.37 million) were assessed. Baseline imaging was used for radiological characterization. Clinical data were obtained from RS. MIS eligibility in the total ICH population meeting ENRICH criteria were estimated and extrapolated to the Swedish population (10.5 million). Results: Of 1,314 ICH patients, 5.9% met the ENRICH criteria for MIS (ICH volume 30–80 ml). Considering the ENRICH trial results indicating the effectiveness of MIS was mainly attributable to intervention for lobar hemorrhages, we determined that 2.8% of our ICH cohort in Sweden would be eligible for MIS. The estimated rate of neurosurgery for ICH could increase from the current 1.46–1.90 patients/100,000 population/year (in absolute numbers from 154 to 200 interventions out of 2,400 ICHs in Sweden annually). Conclusions: We show that 2.8% of the Skane ICH population would be eligible for MIS if ENRICH criteria are employed for patients with lobar ICH, corresponding to a 29% increase of current surgical rates for ICH in Sweden. As MIS for ICH is not yet standard practice in Sweden, consideration for its implementation within the neurosurgical organization becomes essential to accommodate the anticipated increase in patient demand.

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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
computed tomography, eligibility assessment, epidemiology, intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), minimally invasive (MI), minimally invasive surgery (MIS), neurosurgical procedures, population-wide
in
Frontiers in Stroke
volume
3
article number
1403812
pages
01 - 08
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • scopus:105003661204
DOI
10.3389/fstro.2024.1403812
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2024 Apostolaki-Hansson, Hillal, Göransson, Hansen, Norrving, Ramgren, Wassélius and Ullberg.
id
dc67e194-89ef-4a3b-b60a-bcb9bd77b5c9
date added to LUP
2025-05-27 21:43:42
date last changed
2025-07-09 01:27:23
@article{dc67e194-89ef-4a3b-b60a-bcb9bd77b5c9,
  abstract     = {{<p>Objective: Following the favorable outcomes demonstrated by the Early MiNimally-invasive Removal of IntraCerebral Hemorrhage (ENRICH) trial in supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) patients treated with minimally invasive surgery (MIS), and considering the increasing interest in MIS, we aimed to assess the potential eligibility rate for ICH patients in Sweden. Methods: All patients with spontaneous ICH in the Swedish Stroke Register (RS) during 2017–2020 in Skane county (1.37 million) were assessed. Baseline imaging was used for radiological characterization. Clinical data were obtained from RS. MIS eligibility in the total ICH population meeting ENRICH criteria were estimated and extrapolated to the Swedish population (10.5 million). Results: Of 1,314 ICH patients, 5.9% met the ENRICH criteria for MIS (ICH volume 30–80 ml). Considering the ENRICH trial results indicating the effectiveness of MIS was mainly attributable to intervention for lobar hemorrhages, we determined that 2.8% of our ICH cohort in Sweden would be eligible for MIS. The estimated rate of neurosurgery for ICH could increase from the current 1.46–1.90 patients/100,000 population/year (in absolute numbers from 154 to 200 interventions out of 2,400 ICHs in Sweden annually). Conclusions: We show that 2.8% of the Skane ICH population would be eligible for MIS if ENRICH criteria are employed for patients with lobar ICH, corresponding to a 29% increase of current surgical rates for ICH in Sweden. As MIS for ICH is not yet standard practice in Sweden, consideration for its implementation within the neurosurgical organization becomes essential to accommodate the anticipated increase in patient demand.</p>}},
  author       = {{Apostolaki-Hansson, Trine and Hillal, Amir and Göransson, Nathanael and Hansen, Björn M. and Norrving, Bo and Ramgren, Birgitta and Wassélius, Johan and Ullberg, Teresa}},
  keywords     = {{computed tomography; eligibility assessment; epidemiology; intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH); minimally invasive (MI); minimally invasive surgery (MIS); neurosurgical procedures; population-wide}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{05}},
  pages        = {{01--08}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Stroke}},
  title        = {{The potential for minimally invasive intracerebral hemorrhage evacuation in routine healthcare : applicability of the ENRICH trial criteria to an unselected cohort}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fstro.2024.1403812}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/fstro.2024.1403812}},
  volume       = {{3}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}