1 Hull York Medical School, University of Hull , Hull, United Kingdom .
2 School of Health and Related Research, University of Sheffield , Sheffield, United Kingdom .
J Neurotrauma. 2018 Mar 1;35(5):703-718. doi: 10.1089/neu.2017.5259. Epub 2018 Jan 11.
The optimal management of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients with injuries identified by computed tomography (CT) brain scan is unclear. Some guidelines recommend hospital admission for an observation period of at least 24 h. Others argue that selected lower-risk patients can be discharged from the Emergency Department (ED). The objective of our review and meta-analysis was to estimate the risk of death, neurosurgical intervention, and clinical deterioration in mild TBI patients with injuries identified by CT brain scan, and assess which patient factors affect the risk of these outcomes. A systematic review and meta-analysis adhering to PRISMA standards of protocol and reporting were conducted. Study selection was performed by two independent reviewers. Meta-analysis using a random effects model was undertaken to estimate pooled risks for: clinical deterioration, neurosurgical intervention, and death. Meta-regression was used to explore between-study variation in outcome estimates using study population characteristics. Forty-nine primary studies and five reviews were identified that met the inclusion criteria. The estimated pooled risk for the outcomes of interest were: clinical deterioration 11.7% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 11.7%-15.8%), neurosurgical intervention 3.5% (95% CI: 2.2%-4.9%), and death 1.4% (95% CI: 0.8%-2.2%). Twenty-one studies presented within-study estimates of the effect of patient factors. Meta-regression of study characteristics and pooling of within-study estimates of risk factor effect found the following factors significantly affected the risk for adverse outcomes: age, initial Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), type of injury, and anti-coagulation. The generalizability of many studies was limited due to population selection. Mild TBI patients with injuries identified by CT brain scan have a small but clinically important risk for serious adverse outcomes. This review has identified several prognostic factors; research is needed to derive and validate a usable clinical decision rule so that low-risk patients can be safely discharged from the ED.
轻度创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者的 CT 脑扫描检查发现的损伤的最佳治疗方法尚不清楚。一些指南建议住院观察至少 24 小时。另一些人则认为,一些低风险的患者可以从急诊室(ED)出院。我们的综述和荟萃分析的目的是评估 CT 脑扫描检查发现损伤的轻度 TBI 患者的死亡、神经外科干预和临床恶化的风险,并评估哪些患者因素会影响这些结果的风险。我们进行了一项系统综述和荟萃分析,遵循 PRISMA 协议和报告标准。由两名独立评审员进行研究选择。使用随机效应模型进行荟萃分析,以估算以下结果的汇总风险:临床恶化、神经外科干预和死亡。使用元回归探索使用研究人群特征的研究间变异对结局估计值的影响。确定了符合纳入标准的 49 项原始研究和 5 项综述。对感兴趣的结果的估计汇总风险是:临床恶化 11.7%(95%可信区间[CI]:11.7%-15.8%),神经外科干预 3.5%(95% CI:2.2%-4.9%)和死亡 1.4%(95% CI:0.8%-2.2%)。21 项研究提供了患者因素对影响的研究内估计。对研究特征进行元回归和对风险因素效应的研究内估计值进行汇总发现,以下因素显著影响不良结局的风险:年龄、初始格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)、损伤类型和抗凝治疗。由于人群选择,许多研究的普遍性受到限制。CT 脑扫描检查发现损伤的轻度 TBI 患者有发生严重不良后果的风险,但风险较小,具有重要的临床意义。本综述确定了几个预后因素;需要进行研究以制定和验证可用的临床决策规则,以便安全地将低风险患者从 ED 出院。