Predicting recovery in patients with mild traumatic brain injury and a normal CT using serum biomarkers and diffusion tensor imaging (CENTER-TBI): an observational cohort study
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36336Dato
2024-08-08Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Richter, Sophie; Winzeck, Stefan; Correia, Marta M.; Czeiter, Endre; Whitehouse, Daniel; Kornaropoulos, Evgenios N.; Williams, Guy B.; Verheyden, Jan; Das, Tilak; Tenovuo, Olli; Posti, Jussi P.; Vik, Anne; Moen, Kent Gøran; Håberg, Asta; Wang, Kevin; Buki, Andras; Maas, Andrew; Steyerberg, Ewout; Menon, David K; Newcombe, Virginia F.J.; Amrein, Krisztina; Andelic, Nada; Andreassen, Lasse; Anke, Audny Gabriele Wagner; Azouvi, Philippe; Bellander, Bo-michael; Benali, Habib; Caccioppola, Alessio; Calappi, Emiliana; Carbonara, Marco; Citerio, Giuseppe; Clusmann, Hans; Coburn, Mark; Coles, Jonathan; Correia, Marta; De Keyser, Véronique; Degos, Vincent; Depreitere, Bart; Eikenes, Live; Ezer, Erzsébet; Foks, Kelly; K Frisvold, Shirin; Galanaud, Damien; Ghuysen, Alexandre; Glocker, Ben; Haitsma, Iain; Helseth, Eirik; Nordhøy, Wibeke; Røe, Cecilie; Røise, Olav; Skandsen, TorilSammendrag
Methods - We included 1025 patients aged >18 years with a Glasgow Coma Score >12 and normal CT from the Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) study which recruited between December 19,2014 and December 17, 2017 (NCT02210221). Biomarkers (GFAP, NFL, S100B) were obtained at a median of 8.8 h (Q1–Q3 4.2–16.7) and DTI at 13 days (3–19) after injury. DTI metrics were available in 153 patients for 48 white matter tracts (ICBM-DTI-81 atlas). Incomplete recovery at three months was defined as an extended Glasgow Outcome Scale score <8. Existing prognostic models were fitted with and without biomarkers, or with and without DTI, and internally validated using bootstrapping.
Findings - 385 (38%) patients had incomplete recovery. Adding biomarkers did not improve performance beyond the best existing clinical prognostic model [optimism-corrected AUC 0.69 (95% CI 0.65–0.72) and R2 17% (11–22)]. Adding DTI metrics significantly enhanced all models [best optimism-corrected AUC 0.82 (0.79–0.85) and R2 75% (39–100)]. The top three prognostic tracts were the left posterior thalamic radiation, left superior cerebellar peduncle and right uncinate fasciculus. Serum biomarkers could have avoided 1 in 5 DTI scans, with GFAP <12 h and NFL 12–24 h from injury performing best.
Interpretation - DTI substantially improved existing prognostic models for functional outcome in patients with mTBI and a normal CT, and biomarkers could help select patients for MRI. If validated, DTI could allow for targeted follow-up and enrichment of clinical trials of early interventions to improve outcome.