Epidemiology, Severity Classification, and Outcome of Moderate and Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: A Prospective Multicenter Study

Teuntje M. J. C. Andriessen, Janneke Horn, Gaby Franschman, Joukje van der Naalt, Iain Haitsma, Bram Jacobs, Ewout W. Steyerberg, Pieter E. Vos*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    235 Citations (Scopus)
    809 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Changes in the demographics, approach, and treatment of traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients require regular evaluation of epidemiological profiles, injury severity classification, and outcomes. This prospective multicenter study provides detailed information on TBI-related variables of 508 moderate-to-severe TBI patients. Variability in epidemiology and outcome is examined by comparing our cohort with previous multicenter studies. Additionally, the relation between outcome and injury severity classification assessed at different time points is studied. Based on the emergency department Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), 339 patients were classified as having severe and 129 as having moderate TBI. In 15%, the diagnosis differed when the accident scene GCS was used for classification. In-hospital mortality was higher if severe TBI was diagnosed at both time points (44%) compared to moderate TBI at one or both time points (7-15%, p <0.001). Furthermore, 14% changed diagnosis when a threshold (6 h) for impaired consciousness was used as a criterion for severe TBI: In-hospital mortality was <5% when impaired consciousness lasted for <6 h. This suggests that combining multiple clinical assessments and using a threshold for impaired consciousness may improve the classification of injury severity and prediction of outcome. Compared to earlier multicenter studies, our cohort demonstrates a different case mix that includes a higher age (mean = 47.3 years), more diffuse (Traumatic Coma Databank [TCDB] I-II) injuries (58%), and more major extracranial injuries (40%), with relatively high 6 month mortality rates for both severe (46%) and moderate (21%) TBI. Our results confirm that TBI epidemiology and injury patterns have changed in recent years whereas case fatality rates remain high.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)2019-2031
    Number of pages13
    JournalJournal of Neurotrauma
    Volume28
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Oct-2011

    Keywords

    • epidemiology
    • mortality
    • multicenter study
    • outcome
    • TBI
    • GLASGOW COMA SCALE
    • SEVERE HEAD-INJURY
    • INTRACRANIAL-PRESSURE
    • COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY
    • PREDICTIVE-VALUE
    • INTENSIVE-CARE
    • DATA-BANK
    • MANAGEMENT
    • GUIDELINES
    • MORTALITY

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