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Strategies for Weaning From External Ventricular Drainage
Sponsor: University Hospital, Angers
Summary
External ventricular drainage is frequently used in neurocritical care, particularly in patients admitted for non-traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage who develop hydrocephalus and/or intracranial hypertension. While external ventricular drainage is often initially lifesaving, its prolonged maintenance is associated with complications, especially infections and prolonged hospital length of stay. There is currently no consensus on the optimal weaning strategy. Two approaches are used in routine practice: direct clamping (the external ventricular drain is closed as soon as weanability criteria are met) and gradual weaning (the external ventricular drain level is progressively raised before final clamping). No randomized controlled trial has yet demonstrated the superiority of one strategy over the other in patients with non-traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage. The investigators hypothesize that a direct clamping strategy, combined with daily screening of standardized weanability criteria, will reduce the duration of external ventricular drain maintenance compared with the conventional gradual weaning strategy. SEVDVE-2 is a multicenter, randomized, controlled, parallel-group, single-blind superiority trial that will compare these two weaning strategies in 170 adult patients admitted to critical care for non-traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage with a first external ventricular drain inserted within the previous 3 days. Patients will be randomized 1:1, stratified on the presence of an intraventricular hematoma. The primary outcome is the number of external ventricular drain-free days alive at Day 28.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
170
Start Date
2026-07-01
Completion Date
2031-10-01
Last Updated
2026-06-05
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Direct clamping of external ventricular drain
Daily screening from Day 4 of standardized weanability criteria (no intracranial hypertension for 24h, minimal sedation, external ventricular drainage output \<200 ml/24h with a 3-hour intracranial pressure tolerance test or \<160 ml/24h without test). When criteria are met, the external ventricular drain is directly clamped. The clamping period lasts 48 hours under continuous intracranial pressure monitoring, with a control CT scan performed before external ventricular drain removal. The external ventricular drain is removed in the absence of neurological deterioration, intracranial hypertension, cerebrospinal fluid leak, or ventricular enlargement.
Progressive (gradual) weaning of external ventricular drain
When the patient's clinical condition improves (neurological improvement for ≥48 hours, no intracranial hypertension), the external ventricular drain level is raised by 5 mmHg per day. If neurological deterioration or intracranial hypertension occurs, the external ventricular drain level is lowered to the previous one. When the external ventricular drain level reaches ≥20 mmHg and is tolerated for 24 hours, the external ventricular drain is clamped for 48 hours under continuous intracranial pressure monitoring, with a control CT scan performed before external ventricular drain removal. Theexternal ventricular drain is removed in the absence of neurological deterioration, intracranial hypertension, cerebrospinal fluid leak, or ventricular enlargement.
Locations (5)
University Hospital Angers
Angers, France
University Hospital Brest
Brest, France
University Hospital Nantes
Nantes, France
University Hospital Poitiers
Poitiers, France
University Hospital Rennes
Rennes, France