Nelson Lindsay D, Ranson Jana, Ferguson Adam R, Giacino Joseph, Okonkwo David O, Valadka Alex, Manley Geoffrey, McCrea Michael
Medical College of Wisconsin, Neurosurgery , 8701 West Watertown Plank Road , Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States , 53226 ;
Medical College of Wisconsin, Neurosurgery , 8701 Watertown Plank Road , Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States , 53226 ;
J Neurotrauma. 2017 Jun 8;34(22):3158-72. doi: 10.1089/neu.2017.5139.
The Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended (GOSE) is often the primary outcome measure in clinical trials for traumatic brain injury (TBI). Although the GOSE's capture of global function outcome has several strengths, concerns have been raised about its limited ability to identify mild disability and failure to capture the full scope of problems patients exhibit after TBI. This analysis examined the convergence of disability ratings across a multidimensional set of outcome domains in the Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) Pilot study. The study collected measures recommended by the TBI Common Data Elements (CDE) Workgroup. Patients presenting to 3 emergency departments with a TBI of any severity enrolled in TRACK-TBI prospectively after injury; outcome measures were collected at 3 and six months postinjury. Analyses examined frequency of impairment and overlap between impairment status across the CDE outcome domains of Global Level of Functioning (GOSE), Neuropsychological (cognitive) Impairment, Psychological Status, TBI Symptoms, and Quality of Life. GOSE score correlated in the expected direction with other outcomes (M Spearman's rho = .21 and .49 with neurocognitive and self-report outcomes, respectively). The subsample in the Upper Good Recovery (GOSE 8) category appeared quite healthy across most other outcomes, although 19.0% had impaired executive functioning (Trail Making Test Part B). A significant minority of participants in the Lower Good Recovery subgroup (GOSE 7) met criteria for impairment across numerous other outcome measures. The findings highlight the multidimensional nature of TBI recovery and the limitations of applying only a single outcome measure.
格拉斯哥扩展预后量表(GOSE)通常是创伤性脑损伤(TBI)临床试验中的主要预后指标。尽管GOSE对整体功能预后的评估有几个优点,但人们对其识别轻度残疾的能力有限以及未能涵盖TBI患者所表现出的全部问题范围表示担忧。本分析在创伤性脑损伤转化研究与临床知识(TRACK-TBI)试点研究中,检验了跨多维预后领域的残疾评级的一致性。该研究收集了TBI通用数据元素(CDE)工作组推荐的测量指标。在受伤后前瞻性纳入TRACK-TBI的、因任何严重程度的TBI就诊于3个急诊科的患者;在受伤后3个月和6个月收集预后指标。分析检查了在功能全球水平(GOSE)、神经心理学(认知)损伤、心理状态、TBI症状和生活质量等CDE预后领域中损伤的频率以及损伤状态之间的重叠情况。GOSE评分与其他预后指标呈预期方向的相关性(与神经认知和自我报告预后指标的斯皮尔曼相关系数分别为ρ = 0.21和0.49)。在“良好恢复(GOSE 8)”类别中的子样本在大多数其他预后指标上看起来相当健康,尽管19.0%的患者执行功能受损(连线测验B部分)。在“较低良好恢复(GOSE 7)”亚组中,相当一部分参与者在许多其他预后指标上符合损伤标准。研究结果突出了TBI恢复的多维性质以及仅应用单一预后指标的局限性。