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Nimodipine in traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage: A re-analysis of the HIT I and HIT II trials
Authors:G. D. Murray  G. M. Teasdale  H. Schmilz
Affiliation:(1) Robertson Centre for Biostatistics, Boyd Orr Building, University of Glasgow, Glasgow;(2) Department of Neurosurgery, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK;(3) Biometrics Department, Bayer AG., Wuppertal, Federal Republic of Germany
Abstract:Summary Two large randomised controlled trials have been performed to study the effect of the calcium antagonist nimodipine on the outcome of severe head injury, HIT I [1] amd HIT II [4]. Both trials showed a modest and statistically non-significant increase in the proportion of favourable outcomes in patients treated with nimodipine. A subgroup analysis of the HIT II trial [4, 5] suggested, however, that there could be a substantial protective effect of nimodipine in patients with traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). This report provides a re-analysis of the HIT I data to see whether it provides confirmatory evidence of the subgroup effect observed in HIT II. This involved performing a central review of the CT scans for the HIT I patients, to identify those individuals with evidence of traumatic SAH. The sample size was small, but the HIT I data gave no support to the hypothesis that nimodipine is protective in the traumatic SAH subgroup, where 69% of patients had a poor outcome on placebo and 74% of patients had a poor outcome on nimodipine. The data do not exclude the possibility of a clinically relevant beneficial effect of nimodipine in the traumatic SAH subgroup, but further data are required to provide a definitive answer.In addition, we present a pooled analysis of the data from the two trials, which suggests that the overall benefit of treating unselected head injured patients with nimodipine is unlikely to be clinically relevant.
Keywords:Nimodipine  overview  severe head injury  sub-group analysis  traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage
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