McLeod Shreya, Terry Douglas P, Gardner Andrew J, Iverson Grant L
School of Medicine and Public Health, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
Discipline of Physiotherapy, School of Allied Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Australian Catholic University, QLD, Brisbane, Australia.
Sports Med Open. 2025 Aug 1;11(1):89. doi: 10.1186/s40798-025-00896-9.
The Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (SCAT) is a multimodal, evidence-based tool designed for repeat administration at baseline, pre-season and/ or for post-injury assessments, following a sport related concussion. Repeat administration of concussion assessment tools requires clinicians to understand the instrument's stability and test-retest reliability. Typically, clinicians compare post-injury scores with baseline test results in order to determine whether a clinically significant change has occurred. The National Rugby League Women's (NRLW) Premiership was created in 2018, with a concussion management process requiring annual pre-season baseline medical assessments of players using the Sport Concussion Assessment Concussion Tool-5th Edition (SCAT5). Although baseline normative data have been published for the SCAT5, reliability data are limited in women. The purpose of this study was to examine the one-year test-retest reliability of the SCAT5 component scores, and to develop reliable change indices, for the women's league.
Participants were 63 NRLW players (mean age = 26.9 years, SD = 5.5) from the 2018-2019 and 2019-2020 seasons. Team medical staff conducted the baseline SCAT5 assessments each year. Test-retest reliability estimates for each of the SCAT5 components were low to moderate (ICCs = 0.28-0.57). The following change scores, reflecting worsening, occurred in 20% or fewer of the sample: +3 symptom number, + 4 symptom severity, and - 2 on the Standardized Assessment of Concussion total score. A change of + 2 total modified Balance Error Scoring System errors occurred in fewer than 10% of the NRLW players between the test and retest.
SCAT5 scores had low to moderate test-retest reliability across a one-year period. Reliable change scores for the SCAT5 were developed in this study for use with professional women rugby league players. When evaluating post-injury SCAT5 scores, it can be helpful to consider both what the score means compared to normative reference values and compared to the athlete's individual baseline scores.
运动性脑震荡评估工具(SCAT)是一种多模式、循证工具,设计用于在基线、赛季前和/或运动相关脑震荡后的损伤后评估中重复使用。重复使用脑震荡评估工具要求临床医生了解该工具的稳定性和重测信度。通常,临床医生会将损伤后的分数与基线测试结果进行比较,以确定是否发生了具有临床意义的变化。国家橄榄球联盟女子(NRLW)超级联赛于2018年创立,其脑震荡管理流程要求每年在赛季前使用运动性脑震荡评估工具第5版(SCAT5)对球员进行基线医学评估。虽然已经公布了SCAT5的基线常模数据,但女性的信度数据有限。本研究的目的是检验SCAT5各分量表分数的一年重测信度,并为女子联赛制定可靠的变化指数。
参与者为来自2018 - 2019赛季和2019 - 2020赛季的63名NRLW球员(平均年龄 = 26.9岁,标准差 = 5.5)。球队医务人员每年进行SCAT5基线评估。SCAT5各分量表的重测信度估计值为低到中度(组内相关系数 = 0.28 - 0.57)。样本中20%或更少的人出现了以下反映病情恶化的变化分数:症状数量增加3分、症状严重程度增加4分、脑震荡标准化评估总分减少2分。在测试和重测之间,NRLW球员中少于10%的人出现了总改良平衡误差评分系统误差增加2分的情况。
SCAT5分数在一年期间的重测信度为低到中度。本研究为职业女子橄榄球联盟球员制定了SCAT5的可靠变化分数。在评估损伤后SCAT5分数时,将该分数与常模参考值以及运动员的个体基线分数进行比较来考虑其意义可能会有所帮助。