Ferris Lyndsey M, Kontos Anthony P, Eagle Shawn R, Elbin R J, Collins Michael W, Mucha Anne, McAllister Thomas W, Broglio Steven P, McCrea Michael, Pasquina Paul F, Port Nicholas L
Indiana University School of Optometry, Bloomington, Indiana, USA.
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Am J Sports Med. 2022 Mar;50(4):1106-1119. doi: 10.1177/03635465211072261. Epub 2022 Feb 18.
The Vestibular/Ocular-Motor Screening (VOMS) is a valuable component of acute (<72 hours) sports-related concussion (SRC) assessments and is increasingly used with the Immediate Post-concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing (ImPACT) instrument and the third edition of the Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT3). Research has suggested that VOMS acute postinjury scores are useful in identifying acute concussion. However, the utility of preseason baseline measurements to improve diagnostic accuracy remains ambiguous. To this end, there is a need to determine how reliable VOMS baseline assessments are across years and whether incorporating individuals' baseline performance improves diagnostic yield for acute concussions.
To analyze VOMS, SCAT3, and ImPACT to evaluate the test-retest reliability of consecutive-year preseason baseline assessments to directly compare the diagnostic utility of these tools when incorporating baseline assessments versus using postinjury data alone to identify acute SRC.
Cohort study (diagnosis); Level of evidence, 2.
Preseason and postinjury VOMS, SCAT3, ImPACT Post-Concussion Symptom Scale (PCSS), and ImPACT composite scores were analyzed for 3958 preseason (47.7% female) and 496 acute (≤48 hours) SRC (37.5% female) collegiate athlete evaluations in the National Collegiate Athletic Association-Department of Defense Concussion Assessment Research and Education Consortium. Descriptive statistics, Kolmogorov-Smirnov significance, and Cohen effect size were calculated. Consecutive-year baseline reliability was evaluated for a subset of 447 athlete encounters using Pearson , Cohen κ, Cohen , and 2-way mixed intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs). Wilcoxon signed rank tests were used to determine the statistical significance between population performances, and the 90% reliable change index (RCI) was calculated from the test-retest results. Preseason to postinjury change scores were then calculated from each tool's RCI. Finally, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analyses were conducted, and DeLong method was used to compare the area under the curve (AUC) of raw postinjury scores versus change scores from preseason baseline assessments. Potential effects of sex, medical history (learning disorders or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder), and outlier data were also explored.
Effect sizes were large, and overall predictive utilities were clinically useful for postinjury VOMS Total ( = 2.44; AUC = 0.85), the SCAT3 Symptom Evaluation total severity score ( = 1.74; AUC = 0.82), and the ImPACT PCSS total severity score ( = 1.67; AUC = 0.80). Comparatively, effect sizes were small and predictive utilities were poor for Standardized Assessment of Concussion (SAC), modified Balance Error Scoring System (mBESS), and all ImPACT composites ( = 0.11-0.46; AUC = 0.48-0.59). Preseason baseline test-retest reliability was poor to moderate ( = 0.23-0.52; κ = 0.32-0.36; ICC = 0.36-0.68) for all assessments except ImPACT Visual Motion Sensitivity ( = 0.73; ICC = 0.85). Incorporating baseline scores for VOMS Total, SCAT3 (Symptom Evaluation, SAC, mBESS), ImPACT PCSS, or ImPACT composites did not significantly improve AUCs.
VOMS Total and symptom severity (SCAT3, PCSS) total scores had large effect sizes and clinically useful AUCs for identifying acute concussion. However, all tools demonstrated high within-patient test-retest variability, resulting in poor reliability. The findings in this sample of collegiate athletes suggest that incorporating baseline assessments does not significantly increase diagnostic yield for acute concussion.
前庭/眼动筛查(VOMS)是急性(<72小时)运动相关脑震荡(SRC)评估的重要组成部分,并且越来越多地与脑震荡后即刻评估和认知测试(ImPACT)工具以及运动脑震荡评估工具第三版(SCAT3)一起使用。研究表明,VOMS伤后急性评分有助于识别急性脑震荡。然而,季前赛基线测量对提高诊断准确性的效用仍不明确。为此,有必要确定VOMS基线评估多年来的可靠性如何,以及纳入个体的基线表现是否能提高急性脑震荡的诊断率。
分析VOMS、SCAT3和ImPACT,以评估连续多年季前赛基线评估的重测可靠性,直接比较这些工具在纳入基线评估与仅使用伤后数据来识别急性SRC时的诊断效用。
队列研究(诊断);证据等级,2级。
对美国国家大学体育协会 - 国防部脑震荡评估研究与教育联盟中3958名季前赛(47.7%为女性)和496例急性(≤48小时)SRC(37.5%为女性)大学生运动员评估的季前赛和伤后VOMS、SCAT3、ImPACT脑震荡后症状量表(PCSS)以及ImPACT综合评分进行了分析。计算了描述性统计量、柯尔莫哥洛夫 - 斯米尔诺夫显著性和科恩效应量。使用皮尔逊相关系数、科恩κ系数、科恩相关系数和双向混合组内相关系数(ICC)对447名运动员的部分数据进行了连续多年基线可靠性评估。采用威尔科克森符号秩检验来确定总体表现之间的统计学显著性,并根据重测结果计算90%可靠变化指数(RCI)。然后从每个工具的RCI计算季前赛到伤后的变化分数。最后,进行了受试者工作特征(ROC)曲线分析,并使用德龙方法比较伤后原始分数与季前赛基线评估变化分数的曲线下面积(AUC)。还探讨了性别、病史(学习障碍或注意力缺陷多动障碍)和异常值数据的潜在影响。
效应量较大,总体预测效用在临床上对伤后VOMS总分(效应量 = 2.44;AUC = 0.85)、SCAT3症状评估总严重程度评分(效应量 = 1.74;AUC = 0.82)和ImPACT PCSS总严重程度评分(效应量 = 1.67;AUC = 0.80)是有用的。相比之下,脑震荡标准化评估(SAC)、改良平衡误差评分系统(mBESS)以及所有ImPACT综合评分的效应量较小且预测效用较差(效应量 = 0.11 - 0.46;AUC = 0.48 - 0.59)。除ImPACT视觉运动敏感性(效应量 = 0.73;ICC = 0.85)外,所有评估的季前赛基线重测可靠性都较差到中等(效应量 = 0.23 - 0.52;κ = 0.32 - 0.36;ICC = 0.36 - 0.68)。纳入VOMS总分、SCAT3(症状评估、SAC、mBESS)、ImPACT PCSS或ImPACT综合评分的基线分数并没有显著提高AUC。
VOMS总分和症状严重程度(SCAT3、PCSS)总分在识别急性脑震荡方面有较大的效应量和临床上有用的AUC。然而,所有工具在患者内重测变异性都很高,导致可靠性较差。在这个大学生运动员样本中的发现表明,纳入基线评估并不能显著提高急性脑震荡的诊断率。