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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06402786
NA

First-in-human Trial of Home Brain Pressure Measured Using Kitea ICP Sensor, Placed During Hydrocephalus Shunt Surgery.

Sponsor: University of Auckland, New Zealand

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Patients with hydrocephalus have an abnormal build-up of fluid around the brain and need a tube surgically implanted to drain that fluid. Patients and their caregivers live with the constant fear that the tube will block. Warning symptoms include irritability, headaches and vomiting. Unfortunately, there is no way of telling when fluid build-up is causing a rise in brain pressure and potentially impeding blood flow to the brain (life threatening) except for a brain scan in hospital and possibly hospitalisation. The investigators want to improve the lives of patients with hydrocephalus. They have developed a tool for parents and caregivers to monitor the pressure in the brain remotely via a sensor placed alongside the drainage tube. The device has been shown to be safe and to give reliable brain pressure readings using a large animal model (sheep). This study is a first-in-human safety study to show it is safe for patient use.

Official title: Wireless HOME Monitoring of Intracranial (BRAIN) PRESSURE

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

1 Year - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

21

Start Date

2024-05-27

Completion Date

2026-04

Last Updated

2026-02-13

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

DEVICE

Kitea ICP Sensor

Kitea ICP Sensor placed in brain during shunt surgery.

Locations (1)

Auckland City Hospital

Auckland, New Zealand