on behalf of the DECIMAL InvestigatorsBackground and Purpose-There is no effective medical treatment of malignant middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarction.The purpose of this clinical trial was to assess the efficacy of early decompressive craniectomy in patients with malignant MCA infarction. Methods-We conducted in France a multicenter, randomized trial involving patients between 18 and 55 years of age with malignant MCA infarction to compare functional outcomes with or without decompressive craniectomy. A sequential, single-blind, triangular design was used to compare the rate of development of moderate disability (modified Rankin scale score Յ3) at 6 months' follow-up (primary outcome) between the 2 treatment groups. Results-After randomization of 38 patients, the data safety monitoring committee recommended stopping the trial because of slow recruitment and organizing a pooled analysis of individual data from this trial and the 2 other ongoing European trials of decompressive craniectomy in malignant MCA infarction. Among the 38 patients randomized, the proportion of patients with a modified Rankin scale score Յ3 at the 6-month and 1-year follow-up was 25% and 50%, respectively, in the surgery group compared with 5.6% and 22.2%, respectively, in the no-surgery group (Pϭ0.18 and Pϭ0.10, respectively). There was a 52.8% absolute reduction of death after craniectomy compared with medical therapy only (PϽ0.0001). Conclusions-In this trial, early decompressive craniectomy increased by more than half the number of patients with moderate disability and very significantly reduced (by more than half) the mortality rate compared with that after medical therapy.
This contribution is being co-published in the following journals: Journal of Hypertension and Vascular Medicine. There will be minor differences in the version published in Vascular Medicine due to copy-editing differences.
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