AI Article Synopsis

  • Thermal flow evaluation (TFE) is a non-invasive technique used to check the function of ventriculoperitoneal shunts, and its effectiveness may reduce the need for revision surgeries.
  • The study aimed to compare the accuracy of two TFE protocols—one using a micropumper (TFE+MP) and the other not using it (TFE-only)—against traditional neuro-imaging in diagnosing potential shunt malfunctions.
  • Results showed that TFE-only had a perfect sensitivity for detecting shunt obstruction, while TFE+MP and neuro-imaging were less effective, indicating TFE can be a preferable alternative to imaging for evaluating shunt function.*

Article Abstract

Background: Thermal flow evaluation (TFE) is a non-invasive method to assess ventriculoperitoneal shunt function. Flow detected by TFE is a negative predictor of the need for revision surgery. Further optimization of testing protocols, evaluation in multiple centers, and integration with clinical and imaging impressions prompted the current study.

Objective: To compare the diagnostic accuracy of 2 TFE protocols, with micropumper (TFE+MP) or without (TFE-only), to neuro-imaging in patients emergently presenting with symptoms concerning for shunt malfunction.

Methods: We performed a prospective multicenter operator-blinded trial of a consecutive series of patients who underwent evaluation for shunt malfunction. TFE was performed, and preimaging clinician impressions and imaging results were recorded. The primary outcome was shunt obstruction requiring neurosurgical revision within 7 d. Non-inferiority of the sensitivity of TFE vs neuro-imaging for detecting shunt obstruction was tested using a prospectively determined a priori margin of -2.5%.

Results: We enrolled 406 patients at 10 centers. Of these, 68/348 (20%) evaluated with TFE+MP and 30/215 (14%) with TFE-only had shunt obstruction. The sensitivity for detecting obstruction was 100% (95% CI: 88%-100%) for TFE-only, 90% (95% CI: 80%-96%) for TFE+MP, 76% (95% CI: 65%-86%) for imaging in TFE+MP cohort, and 77% (95% CI: 58%-90%) for imaging in the TFE-only cohort. Difference in sensitivities between TFE methods and imaging did not exceed the non-inferiority margin.

Conclusion: TFE is non-inferior to imaging in ruling out shunt malfunction and may help avoid imaging and other steps. For this purpose, TFE only is favored over TFE+MP.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7566379PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/neuros/nyaa128DOI Listing

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