Departments of Neurology and Anesthesiology/Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Departments of Neurology and Neurosurgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Neurocrit Care. 2024 Apr;40(2):448-476. doi: 10.1007/s12028-023-01902-2. Epub 2024 Feb 17.
Moderate-severe traumatic brain injury (msTBI) carries high morbidity and mortality worldwide. Accurate neuroprognostication is essential in guiding clinical decisions, including patient triage and transition to comfort measures. Here we provide recommendations regarding the reliability of major clinical predictors and prediction models commonly used in msTBI neuroprognostication, guiding clinicians in counseling surrogate decision-makers.
Using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology, we conducted a systematic narrative review of the most clinically relevant predictors and prediction models cited in the literature. The review involved framing specific population/intervention/comparator/outcome/timing/setting (PICOTS) questions and employing stringent full-text screening criteria to examine the literature, focusing on four GRADE criteria: quality of evidence, desirability of outcomes, values and preferences, and resource use. Moreover, good practice recommendations addressing the key principles of neuroprognostication were drafted.
After screening 8125 articles, 41 met our eligibility criteria. Ten clinical variables and nine grading scales were selected. Many articles varied in defining "poor" functional outcomes. For consistency, we treated "poor" as "unfavorable". Although many clinical variables are associated with poor outcome in msTBI, only the presence of bilateral pupillary nonreactivity on admission, conditional on accurate assessment without confounding from medications or injuries, was deemed moderately reliable for counseling surrogates regarding 6-month functional outcomes or in-hospital mortality. In terms of prediction models, the Corticosteroid Randomization After Significant Head Injury (CRASH)-basic, CRASH-CT (CRASH-basic extended by computed tomography features), International Mission for Prognosis and Analysis of Clinical Trials in TBI (IMPACT)-core, IMPACT-extended, and IMPACT-lab models were recommended as moderately reliable in predicting 14-day to 6-month mortality and functional outcomes at 6 months and beyond. When using "moderately reliable" predictors or prediction models, the clinician must acknowledge "substantial" uncertainty in the prognosis.
These guidelines provide recommendations to clinicians on the formal reliability of individual predictors and prediction models of poor outcome when counseling surrogates of patients with msTBI and suggest broad principles of neuroprognostication.
中重度创伤性脑损伤(msTBI)在全球范围内具有较高的发病率和死亡率。准确的神经预后对于指导临床决策至关重要,包括患者分诊和过渡到舒适治疗。本研究旨在为 msTBI 神经预后中常用的主要临床预测指标和预测模型的可靠性提供建议,以指导临床医生为替代决策人提供咨询。
我们使用推荐分级的评估、制定与评价(GRADE)方法,对文献中引用的最有临床意义的预测指标和预测模型进行了系统的综述。该综述通过提出特定的人群/干预/比较/结局/时间/设置(PICOTS)问题,并采用严格的全文筛选标准来审查文献,重点关注 GRADE 标准的四个方面:证据质量、结局的可接受性、价值观和偏好以及资源利用。此外,还制定了关于神经预后关键原则的良好实践建议。
经过筛选 8125 篇文章,有 41 篇符合纳入标准。选择了 10 个临床变量和 9 个分级量表。许多文章在定义“不良”功能结局方面存在差异。为了保持一致性,我们将“不良”定义为“不利”。虽然许多临床变量与 msTBI 的不良结局相关,但只有入院时双侧瞳孔无反应的存在,在没有药物或损伤混淆的情况下进行准确评估,被认为对于替代决策人关于 6 个月功能结局或住院死亡率的咨询具有中度可靠性。在预测模型方面,Corticosteroid Randomization After Significant Head Injury(CRASH)-basic、CRASH-CT(CRASH-basic 扩展为计算机断层扫描特征)、International Mission for Prognosis and Analysis of Clinical Trials in TBI(IMPACT)-core、IMPACT-extended 和 IMPACT-lab 模型被推荐为中度可靠,可预测 14 天至 6 个月的死亡率和 6 个月及以上的功能结局。当使用“中度可靠”的预测指标或预测模型时,临床医生必须承认预后存在“较大”的不确定性。
本研究为临床医生提供了关于 msTBI 患者替代决策人咨询时不良结局的个体预测指标和预测模型的正式可靠性的建议,并提出了神经预后的广泛原则。