1Département de médecine familiale et de médicine d'urgence, Faculté de médecine, Université Laval, Québec.
2Centre de recherche du CHU de Québec-Université Laval, Québec.
J Neurosurg. 2024 Jul 12;141(6):1730-1738. doi: 10.3171/2024.4.JNS24183. Print 2024 Dec 1.
Approximately 10% of patients with mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) present with intracranial bleeding, and only 3.5% eventually require neurosurgical intervention, which often necessitates interhospital transfer. Better guidelines and recommendations are needed to manage complicated mild TBI in the emergency department (ED). The main objective of this study was to derive a clinical decision rule, the Quebec Brain Injury Categories (QueBIC), to predict the risk of adverse outcomes for complicated mild TBI in the ED. The secondary objective was to compare the QueBIC's performance with those of other existing guidelines.
The authors conducted a retrospective multicenter cohort study in 3 level I trauma centers. Consecutive patients with complicated mild TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] score 13-15) who were aged ≥ 16 years were included. The primary outcome was a combination of neurosurgical intervention, mild TBI-related death, and clinical deterioration. Statistical analyses included set covering machine analyses.
In total, 477 patients were included in the study. The mean age was 62.9 years, and 68.1% were male. The algorithm classified patients into three risk categories (low, moderate, and high risk). The high-risk group (128 patients) (subdural hemorrhage [SDH] width > 7 mm or any midline shift) presented a sensitivity of 84% (95% CI 71%-93%) and a specificity of 80% (95% CI 76%-84%) to detect neurosurgical intervention and mild TBI-related death, leaving 8 undetected cases. Patients in the moderate-risk group (169 patients) had at least 1 variable: SDH width > 4 mm, initial GCS score ≤ 14, > 1 intraparenchymal hemorrhage, or intraparenchymal hemorrhage width > 4 mm. The combined QueBIC high- and moderate-risk category had a sensitivity of 100% (95% CI 63%-100%) and a specificity of 53% (95% CI 47%-58%) to detect mild TBI-related death or neurosurgical intervention. The sensitivity and specificity values for clinical deterioration when no death or neurosurgical intervention occurred were 81% (95% CI 64%-93%) and 44% (95% CI 39%-49%), respectively. The remaining 180 patients (37.7%) did not meet any high-risk or moderate-risk criteria and were considered low risk. None had neurosurgical intervention or mild TBI-related death. Only 6 (3.3%) low-risk patients showed clinical deterioration.
QueBIC is a safe and effective tool to guide the management of patients presenting to the ED with complicated mild TBI. It accurately identifies patients at low risk for specialized neurotrauma or neurosurgical care. Further validation is required before its use in EDs.
约 10%的轻度创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者出现颅内出血,最终仅 3.5%需要神经外科干预,这通常需要院内转科。需要更好的指南和建议来管理急诊科(ED)中复杂的轻度 TBI。本研究的主要目的是制定一个临床决策规则,即魁北克脑损伤分类(QueBIC),以预测 ED 中复杂轻度 TBI 的不良结局风险。次要目的是比较 QueBIC 与其他现有指南的性能。
作者在 3 个一级创伤中心进行了回顾性多中心队列研究。纳入年龄≥16 岁的格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分 13-15 分的复杂轻度 TBI 连续患者。主要结局是神经外科干预、轻度 TBI 相关死亡和临床恶化的组合。统计分析包括集覆盖机器分析。
共纳入 477 例患者。平均年龄为 62.9 岁,68.1%为男性。该算法将患者分为三个风险类别(低、中、高风险)。高危组(128 例)(硬膜下血肿[SDH]宽度>7mm 或任何中线移位)的敏感性为 84%(95%CI 71%-93%),特异性为 80%(95%CI 76%-84%)以检测神经外科干预和轻度 TBI 相关死亡,漏诊 8 例。中危组(169 例)至少有 1 个变量:SDH 宽度>4mm、初始 GCS 评分≤14、>1 脑实质内出血或脑实质内出血宽度>4mm。QueBIC 高风险和中风险联合分类的敏感性为 100%(95%CI 63%-100%),特异性为 53%(95%CI 47%-58%),以检测轻度 TBI 相关死亡或神经外科干预。无死亡或神经外科干预时临床恶化的敏感性和特异性分别为 81%(95%CI 64%-93%)和 44%(95%CI 39%-49%)。其余 180 例(37.7%)未符合任何高危或中危标准,被认为是低危。无神经外科干预或轻度 TBI 相关死亡。仅 6 例(3.3%)低危患者出现临床恶化。
QueBIC 是一种安全有效的工具,可指导急诊科就诊的复杂轻度 TBI 患者的管理。它准确地识别出低度风险需要专门的神经创伤或神经外科治疗的患者。在 ED 中使用前需要进一步验证。