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Consensus statement from the 2025 Delphi panel on cerebral microdialysis in critical care.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Change log

Abstract

PURPOSE: Secondary brain injury is a common cause of poor outcome after trauma, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and intracerebral hemorrhage, and optimizing treatment requires real-time insight into cerebral metabolism. Cerebral microdialysis (CMD) uniquely provides key related information, yet consensus on its use has not been updated since publication of the consensus statement from the 2014 International Microdialysis Forum. We aimed to assess expert consensus on the use of CMD in critical care and provide contemporary guidance to standardize practice and advance clinical implementation. METHODS: We conducted a 3-round modified Delphi study with international experts in CMD and neurocritical care. Consensus was defined as ≥ 75% agreement among non-abstaining respondents, with a minimum of 30 non-abstaining respondents required per statement. Statements not reaching consensus were iteratively revised based on panelist feedback. RESULTS: Forty of 67 invited experts (60%) from 9 countries participated. Sixty of 62 individual items achieved consensus (97%) across 9 domains: indications and patient selection, technical and procedural considerations, detecting deterioration and secondary injury, metabolic interpretation, treatment algorithms, glucose management, sampling frequency, core reporting items, and barriers to clinical implementation. CONCLUSION: This consensus statement provides updated, evidence-informed recommendations for the use of CMD in critical care. The panel reaffirmed many core recommendations from the 2014 consensus while making targeted advances: cautious extension of guidance to intracerebral hemorrhage, comprehensive reporting guidance addressing frequently omitted elements (19 items vs. 6 in 2014), and identification of 10 key barriers to routine clinical adoption.

Description

Acknowledgements: Not applicable.


Publication status: Published


Funder: NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre; doi: https://doi.org/10.13039/501100018956


Funder: NIHR Health Technology Research Centre


Funder: NIHR Senior Investigator Award


Funder: NIHR Global Health Research Group on Acquired Brain and Spine Injury


Funder: NIHR Health Tech Research Centre for Brain Injury

Journal Title

Crit Care

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1364-8535
1466-609X

Volume Title

30

Publisher

Springer Nature

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
MRC (MR/X021882/1)
MRC (MR/Y008502/1)
Medical Research Council (G0802251/1)
MRC (MR/Z504890/1)
Funding: Adel Helmy recognizes the following support: Medical Research Council/Royal College of Surgeons of England Clinical Research Training Fellowship (Grant no. G0802251), MRC Grants (MR/X021882/1, MR/Y008502/1, MR/Z504890/1), the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre and the NIHR Health Technology Research Centre. Peter J Hutchinson is supported by the NIHR (Senior Investigator Award, NIHR Global Health Research Group on Acquired Brain and Spine Injury, NIHR Health Tech Research Centre for Brain Injury, Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre). The supporting entities had no role in conceptualization, design, data collection, analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.