1 Department of Neurosurgery and Neuroscience Research Center, Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
2 Department of Neurology, Medical College of Wisconsin , Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
J Neurotrauma. 2018 Jan 15;35(2):249-259. doi: 10.1089/neu.2017.4988. Epub 2017 Nov 17.
There is a subset of patients with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) who report persistent symptoms that impair their functioning and quality of life. Being able to predict which patients will experience prolonged symptom recovery would help clinicians target resources for clinical follow-up to those most in need, and would facilitate research to develop precision medicine treatments for mTBI. The purpose of this study was to investigate the predictors of symptom recovery in a prospective sample of emergency department trauma patients with either mTBI or non-mTBI injuries. Subjects were examined at several time points from within 72 h to 45 days post-injury. We quantified and compared the value of a variety of demographic, injury, and clinical assessment (symptom, neurocognitive) variables for predicting self-reported symptom duration in both mTBI (n = 89) and trauma control (n = 73) patients. Several injury-related and neuropsychological variables assessed acutely (< 72 h) post-injury predicted symptom duration, particularly loss of consciousness (mTBI group), acute somatic symptom burden (both groups), and acute reaction time (both groups), with reasonably good model fit when including all of these variables (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC] = 0.76). Incorporating self-reported litigation involvement modestly increased prediction further (AUC = 0.80). The results highlight the multifactorial nature of mTBI recovery, and injury recovery more generally, and the need to incorporate a variety of variables to achieve adequate prediction. Further research to improve this model and validate it in new and more diverse trauma samples will be useful to build a neurobiopsychosocial model of recovery that informs treatment development.
有一部分轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)患者报告持续存在症状,这些症状会影响他们的功能和生活质量。能够预测哪些患者会经历长时间的症状恢复,将有助于临床医生为最需要的患者提供临床随访资源,并促进为 mTBI 开发精准医学治疗方法的研究。本研究旨在调查前瞻性急诊创伤患者(mTBI 或非 mTBI 损伤)中症状恢复的预测因素。受试者在受伤后 72 小时内至 45 天内的多个时间点接受检查。我们量化并比较了各种人口统计学、损伤和临床评估(症状、神经认知)变量对 mTBI(n=89)和创伤对照组(n=73)患者自我报告症状持续时间的预测价值。几项受伤相关和神经心理学变量在受伤后急性(<72 小时)评估时预测了症状持续时间,尤其是意识丧失(mTBI 组)、急性躯体症状负担(两组)和急性反应时间(两组),当包括所有这些变量时,模型拟合度相当好(受试者工作特征曲线下面积 [AUC] = 0.76)。纳入自我报告的诉讼参与情况略微提高了预测效果(AUC = 0.80)。结果突出了 mTBI 恢复的多因素性质,更普遍地反映了损伤恢复的性质,需要纳入各种变量以实现充分的预测。进一步研究改进该模型并在新的和更多样化的创伤样本中验证它,将有助于构建一个神经生物心理社会恢复模型,为治疗方法的发展提供信息。