This proposed project, the National Acute Brain Injury Study: Hypothermia II (NABIS:H In will be a multi-center, prospective, randomized Phase III clinical trial in which standard management at hypothermia (33 degrees C) for 48 hours is tested against standard management at normothermia in patients with severe brain injury (GCS<8), age 16-45 years, and with admission temperature less than or equal to 35 degrees C . The primary outcome measure will be the dichotomized Glasgow Outcome Scale at 6 months after injury (Good Recovery/Moderate Disability vs. Severe Disability/Vegetative/Dead). The sample size of 220 patients will detect an absolute difference of 17% in the percentage of poor outcomes in the two groups at a power of 80%. The selection of this population was based on findings from the original National Acute Brain Injury Study: Hypothermia (NABIS:H I). In that study, with a sample size of 392, hypothermia was induced beginning <6 hours after injury, reaching 33 degrees C by 8.4 + or - 3 hours after injury, and maintaining hypothermia for 48 hours. The null hypothesis was confirmed, with no difference in the percentage of patients making a poor recovery (Severe Disability, Vegetative, Dead) at 6 months after injury (Hypothermia 57%, Normothermia 57%, NS). In 52 patients age >45 years, there were more poor outcomes in the hypothermia group (Hypothermia 89%, Normothermia 69%, p=0.08) due to increased medical complications. However, in 81 patients (22% of 366 patients with complete data) who were age 16-45 years with admission temperature less than or equal to 35 C, maintenance of hypothermia was associated with a marked decrease in the percentage of poor outcomes (Hypothermia, 52%, Normothermia 76%, p=0.02) with no difference in complication rates. The effect was found in all of the 4 high-enrollment centers, and there were no confounding variables that could have explained the difference in outcomes. The entire treatment effect in this subgroup was to shift patients from Severe Disability (poor outcome) to Moderate Disability (good outcome). We believe that the finding is related to a very short treatment window for hypothermia induction. The proposed study prospectively tests whether maintenance of hypothermia present on admission results in better outcome than current management.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01NS043353-03
Application #
6790640
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZNS1-SRB-K (01))
Program Officer
Hicks, Ramona R
Project Start
2002-08-15
Project End
2008-06-30
Budget Start
2005-07-01
Budget End
2006-06-30
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2005
Total Cost
$3,315,277
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Texas Health Science Center Houston
Department
Neurosurgery
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
800771594
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77225
McCauley, Stephen R; Wilde, Elisabeth A; Moretti, Paolo et al. (2013) Neurological outcome scale for traumatic brain injury: III. Criterion-related validity and sensitivity to change in the NABIS hypothermia-II clinical trial. J Neurotrauma 30:1506-11
Clifton, Guy L; Coffey, Christopher S; Fourwinds, Sierra et al. (2012) Early induction of hypothermia for evacuated intracranial hematomas: a post hoc analysis of two clinical trials. J Neurosurg 117:714-20
Clifton, Guy L; Valadka, Alex; Zygun, David et al. (2011) Very early hypothermia induction in patients with severe brain injury (the National Acute Brain Injury Study: Hypothermia II): a randomised trial. Lancet Neurol 10:131-9
Wilde, Elisabeth A; McCauley, Stephen R; Kelly, Tara M et al. (2010) The Neurological Outcome Scale for Traumatic Brain Injury (NOS-TBI): I. Construct validity. J Neurotrauma 27:983-9
Bigler, Erin D; McCauley, Stephen R; Wu, Trevor C et al. (2010) The temporal stem in traumatic brain injury: preliminary findings. Brain Imaging Behav 4:270-82
Wilde, Elisabeth A; McCauley, Stephen R; Kelly, Tara M et al. (2010) Feasibility of the Neurological Outcome Scale for Traumatic Brain Injury (NOS-TBI) in adults. J Neurotrauma 27:975-81
McCauley, Stephen R; Wilde, Elisabeth A; Kelly, Tara M et al. (2010) The Neurological Outcome Scale for Traumatic Brain Injury (NOS-TBI): II. Reliability and convergent validity. J Neurotrauma 27:991-7
Clifton, Guy L; Drever, Pamala; Valadka, Alex et al. (2009) Multicenter trial of early hypothermia in severe brain injury. J Neurotrauma 26:393-7