Lancet Neurol. 2022 Nov;21(11):1004-1060. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(22)00309-X. Epub 2022 Sep 29.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has the highest incidence of all common neurological disorders, and poses a substantial public health burden. TBI is increasingly documented not only as an acute condition but also as a chronic disease with long-term consequences, including an increased risk of late-onset neurodegeneration. The first Commission on TBI, published in 2017, called for a concerted effort to tackle the global health problem posed by TBI. Since then, funding agencies have supported research both in high-income countries (HICs) and in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). In November 2020, the World Health Assembly, the decision-making body of WHO, passed resolution WHA73.10 for global actions on epilepsy and other neurological disorders, and WHO launched the Decade for Action on Road Safety plan in 2021. New knowledge has been generated by large observational studies, including those conducted under the umbrella of the International Traumatic Brain Injury Research (InTBIR) initiative, established as a collaboration of funding agencies in 2011. InTBIR has also provided a huge stimulus to collaborative research in TBI and has facilitated participation of global partners. The return on investment has been high, but many needs of patients with TBI remain unaddressed. This update to the 2017 Commission presents advances and discusses persisting and new challenges in prevention, clinical care, and research. In LMICs, the occurrence of TBI is driven by road traffic incidents, often involving vulnerable road users such as motorcyclists and pedestrians. In HICs, most TBI is caused by falls, particularly in older people (aged ≥65 years), who often have comorbidities. Risk factors such as frailty and alcohol misuse provide opportunities for targeted prevention actions. Little evidence exists to inform treatment of older patients, who have been commonly excluded from past clinical trials—consequently, appropriate evidence is urgently required. Although increasing age is associated with worse outcomes from TBI, age should not dictate limitations in therapy. However, patients injured by low-energy falls (who are mostly older people) are about 50% less likely to receive critical care or emergency interventions, compared with those injured by high-energy mechanisms, such as road traffic incidents. Mild TBI, defined as a Glasgow Coma sum score of 13–15, comprises most of the TBI cases (over 90%) presenting to hospital. Around 50% of adult patients with mild TBI presenting to hospital do not recover to pre-TBI levels of health by 6 months after their injury. Fewer than 10% of patients discharged after presenting to an emergency department for TBI in Europe currently receive follow-up. Structured follow-up after mild TBI should be considered good practice, and urgent research is needed to identify which patients with mild TBI are at risk for incomplete recovery. The selection of patients for CT is an important triage decision in mild TBI since it allows early identification of lesions that can trigger hospital admission or life-saving surgery. Current decision making for deciding on CT is inefficient, with 90–95% of scanned patients showing no intracranial injury but being subjected to radiation risks. InTBIR studies have shown that measurement of blood-based biomarkers adds value to previously proposed clinical decision rules, holding the potential to improve efficiency while reducing radiation exposure. Increased concentrations of biomarkers in the blood of patients with a normal presentation CT scan suggest structural brain damage, which is seen on MR scanning in up to 30% of patients with mild TBI. Advanced MRI, including diffusion tensor imaging and volumetric analyses, can identify additional injuries not detectable by visual inspection of standard clinical MR images. Thus, the absence of CT abnormalities does not exclude structural damage—an observation relevant to litigation procedures, to management of mild TBI, and when CT scans are insufficient to explain the severity of the clinical condition. Although blood-based protein biomarkers have been shown to have important roles in the evaluation of TBI, most available assays are for research use only. To date, there is only one vendor of such assays with regulatory clearance in Europe and the USA with an indication to rule out the need for CT imaging for patients with suspected TBI. Regulatory clearance is provided for a combination of biomarkers, although evidence is accumulating that a single biomarker can perform as well as a combination. Additional biomarkers and more clinical-use platforms are on the horizon, but cross-platform harmonisation of results is needed. Health-care efficiency would benefit from diversity in providers. In the intensive care setting, automated analysis of blood pressure and intracranial pressure with calculation of derived parameters can help individualise management of TBI. Interest in the identification of subgroups of patients who might benefit more from some specific therapeutic approaches than others represents a welcome shift towards precision medicine. Comparative-effectiveness research to identify best practice has delivered on expectations for providing evidence in support of best practices, both in adult and paediatric patients with TBI. Progress has also been made in improving outcome assessment after TBI. Key instruments have been translated into up to 20 languages and linguistically validated, and are now internationally available for clinical and research use. TBI affects multiple domains of functioning, and outcomes are affected by personal characteristics and life-course events, consistent with a multifactorial bio-psycho-socio-ecological model of TBI, as presented in the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) 2022 report. Multidimensional assessment is desirable and might be best based on measurement of global functional impairment. More work is required to develop and implement recommendations for multidimensional assessment. Prediction of outcome is relevant to patients and their families, and can facilitate the benchmarking of quality of care. InTBIR studies have identified new building blocks (eg, blood biomarkers and quantitative CT analysis) to refine existing prognostic models. Further improvement in prognostication could come from MRI, genetics, and the integration of dynamic changes in patient status after presentation. Neurotrauma researchers traditionally seek translation of their research findings through publications, clinical guidelines, and industry collaborations. However, to effectively impact clinical care and outcome, interactions are also needed with research funders, regulators, and policy makers, and partnership with patient organisations. Such interactions are increasingly taking place, with exemplars including interactions with the All Party Parliamentary Group on Acquired Brain Injury in the UK, the production of the NASEM report in the USA, and interactions with the US Food and Drug Administration. More interactions should be encouraged, and future discussions with regulators should include debates around consent from patients with acute mental incapacity and data sharing. Data sharing is strongly advocated by funding agencies. From January 2023, the US National Institutes of Health will require upload of research data into public repositories, but the EU requires data controllers to safeguard data security and privacy regulation. The tension between open data-sharing and adherence to privacy regulation could be resolved by cross-dataset analyses on federated platforms, with the data remaining at their original safe location. Tools already exist for conventional statistical analyses on federated platforms, however federated machine learning requires further development. Support for further development of federated platforms, and neuroinformatics more generally, should be a priority. This update to the 2017 Commission presents new insights and challenges across a range of topics around TBI: epidemiology and prevention (section 1); system of care (section 2); clinical management (section 3); characterisation of TBI (section 4); outcome assessment (section 5); prognosis (Section 6); and new directions for acquiring and implementing evidence (section 7). Table 1 summarises key messages from this Commission and proposes recommendations for the way forward to advance research and clinical management of TBI.
创伤性脑损伤 (TBI) 是所有常见神经疾病中发病率最高的,对公众健康造成了巨大负担。越来越多的证据表明,TBI 不仅是一种急性疾病,而且是一种具有长期后果的慢性疾病,包括增加迟发性神经退行性变的风险。2017 年发布的第一份 TBI 委员会报告呼吁协同努力解决 TBI 这一全球性健康问题。自那时以来,资助机构一直在高收入国家 (HICs) 和低收入和中等收入国家 (LMICs) 支持研究。2020 年 11 月,世界卫生大会(世卫组织的决策机构)通过了关于癫痫和其他神经疾病全球行动的 WHA73.10 号决议,世卫组织于 2021 年启动了道路安全行动计划。包括在国际创伤性脑损伤研究 (InTBIR) 倡议下进行的大型观察性研究在内的新研究已经产生了新的知识,该倡议于 2011 年成立,是资助机构的合作项目。InTBIR 还极大地刺激了 TBI 的合作研究,并促进了全球合作伙伴的参与。投资回报很高,但 TBI 患者的许多需求仍未得到满足。本更新版 2017 年委员会提出了 TBI 预防、临床护理和研究方面的进展,并讨论了持续存在和新的挑战。在 LMICs 中,TBI 的发生主要是由于道路交通事件,通常涉及到脆弱的道路使用者,如摩托车手和行人。在 HICs 中,大多数 TBI 是由跌倒引起的,特别是在老年人(年龄≥65 岁)中,他们通常有合并症。脆弱性和酒精滥用等风险因素为有针对性的预防措施提供了机会。几乎没有证据表明可以为老年患者提供治疗,过去的临床试验通常将这些患者排除在外,因此迫切需要适当的证据。尽管年龄增长与 TBI 预后较差有关,但年龄不应限制治疗。然而,大多数是老年人的因低能量跌倒受伤的患者接受关键护理或紧急干预的可能性比因高能量机制(如道路交通事件)受伤的患者低 50%。轻度 TBI 的定义为格拉斯哥昏迷量表评分为 13-15,占大多数(超过 90%)到医院就诊的 TBI 病例。在因 TBI 到医院就诊的成年患者中,约有 50%的患者在受伤后 6 个月内没有恢复到受伤前的健康水平。在欧洲,目前只有不到 10%的在急诊部门就诊的 TBI 患者接受随访。考虑到轻度 TBI 患者的随访是良好的做法,迫切需要研究确定哪些患者可能无法完全康复。在轻度 TBI 中,CT 检查的选择是一个重要的分诊决策,因为它可以早期发现可能导致住院或挽救生命的手术的病变。目前对决定进行 CT 扫描的决策效率低下,90-95%的扫描患者没有颅内损伤,但会受到辐射风险的影响。InTBIR 研究表明,血液生物标志物的测量增加了先前提出的临床决策规则的价值,有可能在降低辐射暴露的同时提高效率。在轻度 TBI 正常 CT 扫描的患者血液中浓度升高的标志物表明存在结构脑损伤,在多达 30%的轻度 TBI 患者的磁共振扫描中可以看到。高级 MRI,包括弥散张量成像和容积分析,可以识别标准临床 MRI 图像无法检测到的其他损伤。因此,CT 异常的不存在并不能排除结构损伤——这一观察结果与诉讼程序、轻度 TBI 的管理以及 CT 扫描不足以解释临床情况有关。虽然血液生物标志物已被证明在 TBI 的评估中具有重要作用,但大多数可用的检测方法仅供研究使用。迄今为止,在欧洲和美国,只有一家供应商的此类检测方法具有监管批准,可用于排除疑似 TBI 患者进行 CT 成像的需要。尽管有证据表明单一生物标志物的性能与组合生物标志物一样好,但仍提供了对组合生物标志物的监管批准。更多的生物标志物和更多的临床使用平台即将出现,但需要进行跨平台结果的协调。医疗保健效率将受益于提供多样性的供应商。在重症监护环境中,血压和颅内压的自动分析以及衍生参数的计算有助于根据 TBI 患者的个体情况进行管理。人们对确定更有可能从某些特定治疗方法中获益的患者亚组的兴趣代表了向精准医学的可喜转变。比较疗效研究为支持最佳实践提供了证据,无论是在成人还是儿科 TBI 患者中。在改善 TBI 后结局评估方面也取得了进展。关键仪器已被翻译成多达 20 种语言并进行了语言验证,现在可在国际上用于临床和研究用途。TBI 影响多个功能领域,结局受到个人特征和生命历程事件的影响,与 TBI 的多因素生物心理社会生态模型一致,如美国国家科学院、工程院和医学院 (NASEM) 2022 年报告所述。多维度评估是理想的,最好基于全球功能障碍的测量。需要做更多的工作来开发和实施多维评估的建议。对结局的预测与患者及其家属有关,可以帮助基准化护理质量。InTBIR 研究确定了新的构建模块(例如血液生物标志物和定量 CT 分析)来改进现有的预后模型。进一步提高预后预测能力可能来自于 MRI、遗传学和患者发病后状态的动态变化。神经创伤研究人员传统上寻求通过出版物、临床指南和行业合作来实现其研究成果的转化。然而,为了有效地影响临床护理和结局,还需要与研究资助者、监管机构和政策制定者进行互动,并与患者组织建立伙伴关系。这种互动正在增加,其典范包括与英国的后天性脑损伤联合议会小组的互动、在美国进行的 NASEM 报告以及与美国食品和药物管理局的互动。应该鼓励更多的互动,未来与监管机构的讨论应该包括辩论在患者急性精神障碍时是否需要患者同意以及数据共享问题。数据共享得到了资助机构的强烈倡导。从 2023 年 1 月起,美国国立卫生研究院将要求将研究数据上传到公共存储库,但欧盟要求数据控制器保护数据安全和隐私法规。开放数据共享与遵守隐私法规之间的紧张关系可以通过具有原始安全位置的联合平台上的跨数据集分析来解决。传统统计分析的联邦平台工具已经存在,但是联邦机器学习需要进一步开发。应该优先支持联邦平台的进一步开发和神经信息学的发展。本 2017 年委员会更新版提出了 TBI 预防(第 1 节)、护理系统(第 2 节)、临床管理(第 3 节)、TBI 特征(第 4 节)、结局评估(第 5 节)、预后(第 6 节)和获取和实施证据的新方向(第 7 节)等一系列主题的新见解和挑战。表 1 总结了本委员会的主要信息,并提出了推进 TBI 研究和临床管理的建议。
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