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NCT03291964

Rapid MRI for Acute Pediatric Head Trauma

Completed Results posted Last updated 26 January 2023
What this trial tests

trial testing Rapid Brain MRI in Head Trauma in 76 participants. Completed in 1 December 2019.

Timeline
3 September 2017
Primary endpoint
1 August 2019
1 December 2019

Quick facts

Lead sponsorOregon Health and Science University
StatusCompleted
Study typeOBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment76
Start date3 September 2017
Primary completion1 August 2019
Estimated completion1 December 2019
Sites1 location across United States

Drugs / interventions tested

Conditions studied

Sponsor

Oregon Health and Science University

Who can join

Adults 0 to 14, any sex, with Head Trauma or Image, Body. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.

Results — posted to ClinicalTrials.gov

Per-arm endpoint measurements with 95% confidence intervals where reported. Source: trial results section.

Sensitivity: Percentage of MRIs Correctly Identifying Clinically Important Intracranial Injury (True Positives) Primary · within 6 hours from the initial head CT

Sensitivity of Rapid MRI for detection of a clinically important intracranial injury: Percentage of MRIs identifying clinically important intracranial injury. Sensitivity was calculated as the number of true positives divided by "true positive plus false negative". True positive was defined based on meeting clinical criteria for a clinically important TBI and if the imaging found the injury.

GroupValue95% CI
Quick Brain70

Sponsor's own description

Pediatric head trauma is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality for children/adolescents. The current standard of care regarding imaging modality when concerned for an acute head injury is CT. This exposes children to radiation that may predispose to future malignancy. Rapid MRI is a test that eliminates radiation and has expanded uses in multiple other areas. This study is evaluating it for pediatric acute head trauma.

Publications & conference data

1 peer-reviewed publication reference this trial (live from Europe PMC):

  1. Can QuickBrain MRI replace CT as first-line imaging for select pediatric head trauma?
    Sheridan DC, Pettersson D, Newgard CD, Selden NR, et al · · 2020 · cited 13× · PMID 33145547 · DOI 10.1002/emp2.12113

Verify or expand the search:

Other recruiting trials for Head Trauma

Currently open trials in the same condition.

Other Oregon Health and Science University trials

Trials by the same sponsor.

Verify against primary sources

Data sources for this page

Drug Landscape aggregates and links these public records for informational use only. Always verify against the primary source before clinical or regulatory decisions. Canonical URL: https://druglandscape.com/trial/NCT03291964.

Primary sources · FDA · ClinicalTrials.gov · EMA · SEC EDGAR · ChEMBL · Wikidata · full sourcing