Abstract

External ventricular drainage (EVD) may be used for therapeutic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage to control intracranial pressure (ICP) after traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, there is currently uncertainty regarding the optimal timing for EVD insertion. This study aims to compare patient outcomes for patients with early and late EVD insertion. Following the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, MEDLINE/EMBASE/Scopus/Web of Science/Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched for published literature involving at least 10 severe TBI (sTBI) patients from their inception date to December 2019. Outcomes assessed were mortality, functional outcome, ICP control, length of stay, therapy intensity level, and complications. Twenty-one studies comprising 4542 sTBI patients with an EVD were included; 19 of the studies included patients with an early EVD, and two studies had late EVD placements. The limited number of studies, small sample sizes, imbalance in baseline characteristics between the groups and poor methodological quality have limited the scope of our analysis. We present the descriptive statistics highlighting the current conflicting data and the overall lack of reliable research into the optimal timing of EVD. There is a clear need for high quality comparisons of early vs. late EVD insertion on patient outcomes in sTBI.

Highlights

  • Intracranial hypertension is one of the principal secondary insults following severe traumatic brain injury and is related to escalating mass effect from haematomas, contusions, diffuse brain swelling, or hydrocephalus [1]

  • 547 distinct articles were screened by title and abstract, following which 67 full-text articles were reviewed

  • Lee (1998) only included patients with diffuse axonal injury, which is a subgroup of traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients that fitted a strict clinical and radiographic diagnosis [ S1; Table S2]

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Summary

Introduction

Intracranial hypertension is one of the principal secondary insults following severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI) and is related to escalating mass effect from haematomas, contusions, diffuse brain swelling, or hydrocephalus [1]. If escalating mass effect is left untreated, brain herniation and death will follow. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage, via an external ventricular drain (EVD)— known as ventriculostomy—is one of a number of therapies for the management of intracranial hypertension after severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI). The pooled incidence for EVD-associated infection in a meta-analysis of 35 observational studies (from 1966 to 2013) is 11.4/1000 catheter-days, whilst that for placement-related haemorrhage ranges from 0 to 34.0% [8,10]

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