NerveTrend vs. i-IONM in Prevention of Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Events During Bilateral Thyroid Surgery.
NCT ID: NCT04794257
Last Updated: 2021-05-04
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.
UNKNOWN
NA
264 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-04-01
2023-03-31
Brief Summary
Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.
The hypothesis explored in this study is that NerveTrend mode may be more accurate than conventional i-IONM mode in intraoperative identification of impending neural injury and in prognostication of postoperative glottis function in monitored bilateral thyroid surgery. Hence, NerveTrend mode may be considered a bridge between i-IONM and c-IONM modes, and particularly in health care environments with limited financial resources it can be considered a substantial step forward representing a modern alternative to the c-IONM technique and providing benefits over conventional i-IONM mode.
A prospective, randomized study with 2 arms: i-IONM vs. NeveTrend mode (n=132 patients and 264 nerves at risk, each).
The primary outcome measure is prevalence of recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) injury (%) on postoperative day 1 assessed by direct laryngoscopy.
Related Clinical Trials
Explore similar clinical trials based on study characteristics and research focus.
NerveTrend vs. NerveAssure in Prevention of Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve Injury During Thyroid Surgery
NCT06289309
Visualization Versus Intraoperative Neuromonitoring of the Recurrent Laryngeal Nerves in Thyroid Surgery
NCT00661024
Intraoperative Electromyographic Monitoring of the Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve in Thyroid Surgery
NCT00629746
Electrophysiologic Study of Perioperative Monitoring of the Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve: Impaired Vocal Cord Movement After Thyroidectomy
NCT02886481
Visualization Versus Neuromonitoring of the External Branch of the Superior Laryngeal Nerve During Thyroidectomy.
NCT01395134
Detailed Description
Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.
On the other hand, a brand new NIM Vital equipment allows now for using i-IONM in quasi continuous mode which is termed NerveTrend mode. This concept is a natural evolution of i-IONM towards c-IONM mode but is operator dependent and not automatic as in c-IONM mode. Hence, careful clinical validation of NerveTrend mode is needed in order to identify its clinical pertinence with respect to preventing neural damage compared to the standard of i-IONM mode in thyroid surgery. A prospective, randomized study with 2 arms: i-IONM vs. NeveTrend mode (n=132 patients and 264 nerves at risk, each).
Patients who will sign the informed consent will be randomized to two groups: i-IONM vs. NerveTrend application during planned total thyroidectomy.
The standardized approach to IONM will be used as outlined by the guidelines of the International Neural Monitoring Study Group in Thyroid and Parathyroid Surgery.
All the operations will be performed under general anesthesia by two experienced endocrine surgeons (MB, AK) with annual volume of thyroid surgery \> 300 cases, each. The anesthesia protocol is: intravenous midazolam premedication, induction with fentanyl, thiopental and suxamethonium, endotracheal intubation and sevoflurane maintenance. No other muscle relaxants are used during surgery. A standard cervicotomy is used in all the patients. Visual identification of RLN low in the neck (below the crossing with the inferior thyroid artery) will facilitated by the use of the IONM system employing the nerve mapping technique. Once the nerve iss visually identified, repeated stimulations with the IONM monopolar probe served to trace the nerve path in the operative field and test its functional integrity during dissection. In each patient, RLN will be exposed and the branches of the superior and inferior thyroid arteries will be divided close to the thyroid capsule.
NIM Vital (Medtronic, Jacksonville, US) will be used. The NIM Vital system operates with surface electrodes integrated with an endotracheal NIM TriVantage tube 7.0-8.0 in diameter, which is inserted by an anesthetist between the vocal folds under direct vision during intubation. The standardized technique of IONM RLNs wll be used, including initial vagal response evaluation at the beginning and final vagal response evaluation at the end of surgery (IONM = L1+V1+R1+R2+V2+L2) according to the recommendations formulated by the International Intraoperative Neural Monitoring Study Group. The nerves will be stimulated using a monopolar electrode and the interrupted stimulation technique at 1mA, 100ms impulse duration and 4Hz frequency. In case of the bifurcated RLN nerves, the assessment includes post-stimulation response of each nerve branch. Adduction of the vocal folds is detected by the endotracheal tube electromyography and abduction by finger palpation of muscle contraction in the posterior cricoarytenoid ("laryngeal twitch"). In operations with i-IONM mode the IONM stimulator will be used to test vagal response at the beginning of surgery, map out and trace the RLNs during surgery by repetitive stimulations, and in case of loss of signal (LOS) it will be used to identify the type and site of neural injury (Type I vs. Type II). Final prognostication of postoperative neral function will be based on vagal stimulation at the end of each lobectomy.
In operations with NerveTrend the IONM stimulator will be used in the same manner as in the i-IONM arm, but the EMG trending including amplitude and latency changes from initial vagal baseline will be evaluated using the NerveTrend mode at 3 - 5min intervals to assure almost real time EMG tracing and allow for modification of surgical maneuvers in case of occurrence of severe combined events (yellow zone) in order not to end up with the LOS (red zone).
LOS is defined as absence of EMG signal following stimulation of the ipsilateral vagus nerve, EMG signal amplitude below 100 μV following stimulation with 1-2 mA current in dry field, lack of palpable "laryngeal twitch" or visible laryngeal movement following stimulation of the ipsilateral vagus nerve. To differentiate between true and false LOS, the INMSG-proposed problem-solving algorithm will be employed intraoperatively. In cases intraoperatively recognized as true LOS, the neuromapping technique is used to determine the character of nerve damage (segmental- type I, global - type II), and the localization of the injury site.
IONM assessment is based on the definition by Chan and Lo. The percentage of RLN dysfunctions is calculated per the number of RLNs at risk and not per the number of patients. Loss of signal after vagal stimulation following thyroid lobe resection (V2) is classified as a positive test result prognosticating ipsilateral vocal cord paresis. The test is interpreted as true positive (TP) when laryngoscopy confirmed ipsilateral vocal cord paresis, and false positive (FP) when the mobility of the ipsilateral vocal fold is normal. Preserved normal signal following vagal stimulation after thyroid lobe resection (V2) is classified as a negative result that prognosticated normal postoperative mobility of the ipsilateral vocal fold. The test is interpreted as true negative (TN) when laryngoscopy demonstrated postoperative normal mobility of the ipsilateral vocal fold and as false negative (FN) when ipsilateral vocal fold paresis is seen postoperatively.
Power calculation for the study: The sample size is estimated based on the principle of detecting a 5% difference in the prevalence of early RLN injury (6% for i-IONM vs. 1% for NerveTrend) with a 80% probability at p \< 0.05. Assuming a 20% drop out rate a group of 528 nerves at risk (assessed in 264 patients undergoing bilateral thyroid surgery) should be enough to test if clinically pertinent differences exist between i-IONM vs. NerveTrend modes (n = 264 nerves at risk which is equal to 132 patients in each respective group undergoing bilateral thyroid surgery). The resultant data will be statistically processed using the statistical software MedCalc (version 19, MedCalc Software, Belgium). Assessment of the changeability of the investigated parameters will be presented by arithmetic means, median values, standard deviations (SD), minimum and maximum values (min - max), 95% confidence interval (95% CI) and percentage of prevalence (%). An inter-group comparison of particular properties will be done by means of the Chi-2 test (non-parametric variables) and by the univariate analysis of variance ANOVA (parametric variables). To assess the diagnostic accuracy of intraoperative neuromonitoring, the Receiver Operating Characteristics (ROC) curves will be analyzed and the Area Under Curve (AUC) values will be compared based on the non-parametric method of DeLong et al.
Thus, the predictive values of the positive and negative results will be calculated and the most optimal predictive criterion will be identified for i-IONM vs NerveTrend, separately. The incidence of nerve events will be calculated based on the number of nerves at risk. The significance level is accepted at p \< 0.05.
Conditions
See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.
Study Design
Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.
RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
DOUBLE
Study Groups
Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.
i-IONM
In operations with i-IONM mode the IONM stimulator will be used to test vagal response at the beginning of surgery, map out and trace the RLNs during surgery by repetitive stimulations, and in case of loss of signal (LOS) it will be used to identify the type and site of neural injury (Type I vs. Type II). Final prognostication of postoperative neral function will be based on vagal stimulation at the end of each lobectomy.
Neuromonitoring of the recurrent laryngeal nerves
The NIM Vital system (Medtronic, Jacksonville, US) operates with surface electrodes integrated with an endotracheal NIM TriVantage tube 7.0-8.0 in diameter, which is inserted by an anesthetist between the vocal folds under direct vision during intubation. The standardized technique of IONM RLNs wll be used, including initial vagal response evaluation at the beginning and final vagal response evaluation at the end of surgery (IONM = L1+V1+R1+R2+V2+L2) according to the recommendations formulated by the International Intraoperative Neural Monitoring Study Group. The nerves will be stimulated using a monopolar electrode and the interrupted stimulation technique at 1mA, 100ms impulse duration and 4Hz frequency. In case of the bifurcated RLN nerves, the assessment includes post-stimulation response of each nerve branch. Adduction of the vocal folds is detected by the endotracheal tube electromyography and abduction by finger palpation of muscle contraction in the posterior cricoarytenoid.
NerveTrend
In operations with NerveTrend the IONM stimulator will be used in the same manner as in the i-IONM arm, but the EMG trending including amplitude and latency changes from initial vagal baseline will be evaluated using the NerveTrend mode at 3 - 5min intervals to assure almost real time EMG tracing and allow for modification of surgical maneuvers in case of occurrence of severe combined events (yellow zone) in order not to end up with the LOS (red zone).
Neuromonitoring of the recurrent laryngeal nerves
The NIM Vital system (Medtronic, Jacksonville, US) operates with surface electrodes integrated with an endotracheal NIM TriVantage tube 7.0-8.0 in diameter, which is inserted by an anesthetist between the vocal folds under direct vision during intubation. The standardized technique of IONM RLNs wll be used, including initial vagal response evaluation at the beginning and final vagal response evaluation at the end of surgery (IONM = L1+V1+R1+R2+V2+L2) according to the recommendations formulated by the International Intraoperative Neural Monitoring Study Group. The nerves will be stimulated using a monopolar electrode and the interrupted stimulation technique at 1mA, 100ms impulse duration and 4Hz frequency. In case of the bifurcated RLN nerves, the assessment includes post-stimulation response of each nerve branch. Adduction of the vocal folds is detected by the endotracheal tube electromyography and abduction by finger palpation of muscle contraction in the posterior cricoarytenoid.
Interventions
Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.
Neuromonitoring of the recurrent laryngeal nerves
The NIM Vital system (Medtronic, Jacksonville, US) operates with surface electrodes integrated with an endotracheal NIM TriVantage tube 7.0-8.0 in diameter, which is inserted by an anesthetist between the vocal folds under direct vision during intubation. The standardized technique of IONM RLNs wll be used, including initial vagal response evaluation at the beginning and final vagal response evaluation at the end of surgery (IONM = L1+V1+R1+R2+V2+L2) according to the recommendations formulated by the International Intraoperative Neural Monitoring Study Group. The nerves will be stimulated using a monopolar electrode and the interrupted stimulation technique at 1mA, 100ms impulse duration and 4Hz frequency. In case of the bifurcated RLN nerves, the assessment includes post-stimulation response of each nerve branch. Adduction of the vocal folds is detected by the endotracheal tube electromyography and abduction by finger palpation of muscle contraction in the posterior cricoarytenoid.
Eligibility Criteria
Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.
Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* previous thyroid surgery,
* pregnancy
* lactation
* age \< 18 years
* age \> 65 years
* ASA 4-5 grade (American Society of Anesthesiology)
* inability to comply with the follow-up protocol
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.
Marcin Barczynski
OTHER
Responsible Party
Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.
Marcin Barczynski
Head, Department of Endocrine Surgery, Principal Investigator, Clinical Professor
Principal Investigators
Learn about the lead researchers overseeing the trial and their institutional affiliations.
Marcin Barczynski
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Department of Endocrine Surgery, Jagiellonian University College of Medicine
Locations
Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.
Department of Endocrine Surgery, Jagiellonian University College of Medicine
Krakow, , Poland
Countries
Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.
Central Contacts
Reach out to these primary contacts for questions about participation or study logistics.
Facility Contacts
Find local site contact details for specific facilities participating in the trial.
References
Explore related publications, articles, or registry entries linked to this study.
Randolph GW, Dralle H; International Intraoperative Monitoring Study Group; Abdullah H, Barczynski M, Bellantone R, Brauckhoff M, Carnaille B, Cherenko S, Chiang FY, Dionigi G, Finck C, Hartl D, Kamani D, Lorenz K, Miccolli P, Mihai R, Miyauchi A, Orloff L, Perrier N, Poveda MD, Romanchishen A, Serpell J, Sitges-Serra A, Sloan T, Van Slycke S, Snyder S, Takami H, Volpi E, Woodson G. Electrophysiologic recurrent laryngeal nerve monitoring during thyroid and parathyroid surgery: international standards guideline statement. Laryngoscope. 2011 Jan;121 Suppl 1:S1-16. doi: 10.1002/lary.21119.
Schneider R, Randolph GW, Dionigi G, Wu CW, Barczynski M, Chiang FY, Al-Quaryshi Z, Angelos P, Brauckhoff K, Cernea CR, Chaplin J, Cheetham J, Davies L, Goretzki PE, Hartl D, Kamani D, Kandil E, Kyriazidis N, Liddy W, Orloff L, Scharpf J, Serpell J, Shin JJ, Sinclair CF, Singer MC, Snyder SK, Tolley NS, Van Slycke S, Volpi E, Witterick I, Wong RJ, Woodson G, Zafereo M, Dralle H. International neural monitoring study group guideline 2018 part I: Staging bilateral thyroid surgery with monitoring loss of signal. Laryngoscope. 2018 Oct;128 Suppl 3:S1-S17. doi: 10.1002/lary.27359. Epub 2018 Oct 5.
Barczynski M, Konturek A, Stopa M, Honowska A, Nowak W. Randomized controlled trial of visualization versus neuromonitoring of the external branch of the superior laryngeal nerve during thyroidectomy. World J Surg. 2012 Jun;36(6):1340-7. doi: 10.1007/s00268-012-1547-7.
Other Identifiers
Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.
ERP-2020-12499
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
More Related Trials
Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.