Journal of neurotrauma
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Journal of neurotrauma · Sep 2019
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter StudyCost-effectiveness of Erythropoietin in Traumatic Brain Injury (EPO-TBI): A multinational trial based economic analysis.
The EPO-TBI multi-national randomized controlled trial found that erythropoietin (EPO), when compared to placebo, did not affect 6-month neurological outcome, but reduced illness severity-adjusted mortality in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), making the cost-effectiveness of EPO in TBI uncertain. The current study uses patient-level data from the EPO-TBI trial to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of EPO in patients with moderate or severe TBI from the healthcare payers' perspective. We addressed the issue of transferability in multi-national trials by estimating costs and effects for specific geographical regions of the study (Australia/New Zealand, Europe, and Saudi Arabia). ⋯ Mean unadjusted costs (95% CI) were $US5668 (-9191 to -2144; p = 0.002) lower in the treatment group; controlling for baseline IMPACT-TBI score and regional heterogeneity reduced this difference to $2377 (-12,446 to 7693; p = 0.64). For a willingness-to-pay threshold of $US50,000 per QALY, 71.8% of replications were considered cost-effective. Therefore, we did not find evidence that EPO was significantly cost-effective in the treatment of moderate or severe TBI at 6-month follow-up.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Sep 2019
Randomized Controlled TrialExercise-induced alterations in sympathetic-somatomotor coupling in incomplete spinal cord injury.
The aim of this study was to understand how high- and low-intensity locomotor training (LT) affects sympathetic-somatomotor (SS) coupling in people with incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI). Proper coupling between sympathetic and somatomotor systems allows controlled regulation of cardiovascular responses to exercise. In people with SCI, altered connectivity between descending pathways and spinal segments impairs sympathetic and somatomotor coordination, which may have deleterious effects during exercise and limit rehabilitation outcomes. ⋯ Participants who completed high- versus low-LT exhibited significant decreases in reflex torques during triggered sympathetic activity (cold: -83 vs. 13%, p < 0.01; pain: -65 vs. 54%, p < 0.05; mental math: -43 vs. 41%; p < 0.05). Mean arterial pressure responses to sympathetic stimuli were slightly higher following high- versus low-LT (cold: 30 vs. -1.5%; pain: 6 vs. -12%; mental math: 5 vs. 7%), although differences were not statistically significant. These results suggest that high-LT may be advantageous to low-LT to improve SS coupling in people with incomplete SCI.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Sep 2019
Meta AnalysisImpact of Early (<24 h) Surgical Decompression on Neurological Recovery in Thoracic Spinal Cord Injury: A Meta-Analysis.
The impact of surgical timing in neurological recovery in thoracic and thoracolumbar traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI) is still a subject of discussion. While in cervical tSCI one may expect a beneficial effect of early intervention within 24 h, especially in complete cases, this has not yet been demonstrated clearly for thoracic tSCI. This study addresses neurological improvement after early and late surgery for thoracic and thoracolumbar tSCI. ⋯ In the qualitative analysis, six of seven studies, which investigated the effect of surgical timing, observed a significant effect of early surgery on at least one ASIA grade improvement. Quantitative analysis in 948 patients with thoracic and thoracolumbar tSCI data, however, did not reveal a significant increase in odds of ≥1 ASIA grade recovery in early surgery (66.8% [95% confidence interval (CI): 45.0-87.8%] compared with late surgery (48.9% [95% CI: 25.1-70.7%; odds ratio (OR) 2.2 (95% CI: 0.6-14.0]). This study did not observe a significant beneficial effect of surgical decompression within 24 h in patients with thoracic and thoracolumbar tSCI.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Sep 2019
Divergent 6-Month Functional Recovery Trajectories and Predictors after Traumatic Brain Injury: Novel Insights from the COBRIT Study.
Cross-sectional approaches to outcome assessment may not adequately capture heterogeneity in recovery after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Using latent class mixed models (LCMM), a data-driven analytic that identifies groups of patients with similar trajectories, we identified distinct 6 month functional recovery trajectories in a large cohort (n = 1046) of adults 18-70 years of age with complicated mild to severe TBI who participated in the Citicoline Brain Injury Treatment Trial (COBRIT). We used multinomial logistic fixed effect models and backward elimination, forward selection, and forward stepwise selection with several stopping rules to explore baseline predictors of functional recovery trajectory. ⋯ GCS was the most consistently selected predictor across all models. All models also selected at least one demographic or pre-injury medical predictor. LCMM successfully identified dramatically divergent, clinically meaningful 6 month recovery trajectories with utility to inform clinical trial design.
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Journal of neurotrauma · Sep 2019
Multicenter StudyModelling the influence of age on neurologic outcome and quality of life one year after traumatic brain injury: a prospective multicenter cohort study.
After traumatic brain injury (TBI), the relationship between age and outcome at 1 year, including quality of life, has been poorly explored. The aim of our study was to describe this relationship in a cohort of TBI patients in a regional trauma system. Consecutive TBI patients with severe lesions on initial brain computed tomography (CT) scan were included from July 2014 to July 2016 in two French level-1 trauma centers. ⋯ No difference according to age was found for the quality of life. After TBI, the mortality at 1 year dramatically increased with age after 70 years. For elderly survivors, impairment of quality of life was not different from younger patients.