Traumatic Brain Injury Diagnostic Interview: Development, Interrater Reliability, and 2-Week Post-Injury Clinical Profiles.

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Mary U Simons, Alyssa Maio, Daniel L Huber, John D Corrigan, Nancy Temkin, Marin Darsie, Ryan Kitagawa, John Whyte, Joseph T Giacino, Murray B Stein, Geoffrey T Manley, Michael A McCrea, Lindsay D Nelson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Because most traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) do not present with objective indicators (e.g., neuroimaging findings) to confirm the diagnosis, clinicians often rely on self- or observer-reporting of alteration of consciousness (AOC; e.g., loss of consciousness [LOC], amnesia, other signs of altered mental status), and symptoms to make diagnoses. Moreover, there is no universal agreement on signs and symptoms to sufficiently diagnose TBI, which leads to variability and ambiguity in how TBI is diagnosed in clinical and research settings. The lack of standardized procedures for the diagnosis of acute TBI is a major challenge that hampers the ability to evaluate and compare TBI studies and advance the science and treatment of TBI. We present a new semi-structured TBI Diagnostic Interview (TBI-DI), developed for prospective TBI research to collect injury information important to verifying eligibility for the diagnosis of TBI. Specifically, the TBI-DI collects patient (and/or witness) reports of head trauma, AOC (including LOC and amnesia), and TBI-related symptomology. We describe the protocol, interrater reliability of the TBI-DI items to the same audio-recorded interview, and observed injury characteristics for interviews conducted at 2 weeks post-injury. The sample comprised 335 interviews (320 self-reported, 10 informant-reported, and 5 both) collected on individuals with TBI who were prospectively recruited from 4 U.S. level 1 trauma centers from 2019 to 2023. Cohen's kappa was calculated to summarize interrater reliability n = 288 interviews. UpSet plots were created to illustrate the prevalence of distinct profiles of signs of AOC and symptom reporting. Overall, there was a near-perfect agreement between raters for all AOC descriptors (κ = 0.85-0.92) and symptom items (κ ranging from 0.92 to 0.99). We observed diverse profiles of AOC, with 45% manifesting witnessed LOC, post-traumatic amnesia, or other altered mental status. Patients (n = 325) self-reported 256 different combinations of the 14 acute symptoms included in the interview (most commonly experiencing headache, dizziness, fatigue, and difficulty concentrating). The TBI-DI and associated SOP appear well-suited for use in a multicenter prospective study of TBI. Future research should examine the stability of reporting by respondents and the alignment between interview and objective clinical information. The TBI-DI solicits diverse acute diagnostic information that, when combined with clinical information (including confounding factors) and objective injury indicators, may inform more rigorous scientific reporting and evidence-based TBI diagnostic practices.

创伤性脑损伤诊断访谈:创伤性脑损伤诊断访谈:开发、相互间可靠性和损伤后两周临床概况。
由于大多数创伤性脑损伤(tbi)没有客观指标(如神经影像学结果)来证实诊断,临床医生通常依赖于自我或观察者报告的意识改变(AOC;例如,意识丧失[LOC],健忘症,其他精神状态改变的迹象),以及做出诊断的症状。此外,对于足以诊断TBI的体征和症状没有普遍的共识,这导致了临床和研究中如何诊断TBI的可变性和模糊性。缺乏诊断急性脑外伤的标准化程序是一个主要的挑战,它阻碍了评估和比较脑外伤研究的能力,并推动了脑外伤的科学和治疗。我们提出了一种新的半结构化TBI诊断访谈(TBI- di),用于前瞻性TBI研究,以收集对验证TBI诊断资格重要的损伤信息。具体来说,TBI-DI收集患者(和/或证人)关于头部创伤、AOC(包括LOC和失忆症)和tbi相关症状的报告。我们描述了方案,TBI-DI项目对同一录音访谈的相互可靠性,并观察了损伤后2周进行的访谈的损伤特征。该样本包括335个访谈(320个自我报告,10个信息者报告,5个两者都有),这些访谈收集自2019年至2023年从4个美国一级创伤中心招募的TBI患者。计算Cohen’s kappa,总结了288个访谈的互译者信度。创建了不安图来说明AOC的不同症状和症状报告的患病率。总体而言,所有AOC描述符(κ = 0.85-0.92)和症状项目(κ范围为0.92至0.99)的评分者之间存在近乎完美的一致性。我们观察到不同类型的AOC,其中45%表现为LOC、创伤后健忘症或其他精神状态改变。患者(n = 325)自我报告了访谈中包括的14种急性症状的256种不同组合(最常见的是头痛、头晕、疲劳和难以集中注意力)。TBI- di和相关的SOP似乎非常适合用于TBI的多中心前瞻性研究。未来的研究应检验受访者报告的稳定性以及访谈与客观临床信息之间的一致性。TBI- di收集各种急性诊断信息,当与临床信息(包括混杂因素)和客观损伤指标相结合时,可能会为更严格的科学报告和基于证据的TBI诊断实践提供信息。
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来源期刊
Journal of neurotrauma
Journal of neurotrauma 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
7.10%
发文量
233
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Neurotrauma is the flagship, peer-reviewed publication for reporting on the latest advances in both the clinical and laboratory investigation of traumatic brain and spinal cord injury. The Journal focuses on the basic pathobiology of injury to the central nervous system, while considering preclinical and clinical trials targeted at improving both the early management and long-term care and recovery of traumatically injured patients. This is the essential journal publishing cutting-edge basic and translational research in traumatically injured human and animal studies, with emphasis on neurodegenerative disease research linked to CNS trauma.
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