Predicting Functional Dependency in Patients with Disorders of Consciousness: A TBI-Model Systems and TRACK-TBI Study

There are currently no models that predict long-term functional dependency in patients with disorders of consciousness (DoC) after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Fit, test, and externally validate a prediction model for 1-year dependency in patients with DoC 2 or more weeks after TBI. Secondary analy...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inmedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Main Authors Snider, Samuel B, Temkin, Nancy R, Barber, Jason, Edlow, Brian L, Giacino, Joseph T, Hammond, Flora M, Izzy, Saef, Kowalski, Robert G, Markowitz, Amy J, Rovito, Craig A, Shih, Shirley L, Zafonte, Ross D, Manley, Geoffrey T, Bodien, Yelena G
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 15.03.2023
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:There are currently no models that predict long-term functional dependency in patients with disorders of consciousness (DoC) after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Fit, test, and externally validate a prediction model for 1-year dependency in patients with DoC 2 or more weeks after TBI. Secondary analysis of patients enrolled in TBI Model Systems (TBI-MS, 1988-2020, Discovery Sample) or Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI (TRACK-TBI, 2013-2018, Validation Sample) and followed 1-year post-injury. Multi-center study at USA rehabilitation hospitals (TBI-MS) and acute care hospitals (TRACK-TBI). Adults with TBI who were not following commands at rehabilitation admission (TBI-MS; days post-injury vary) or 2-weeks post-injury (TRACK-TBI). In the TBI-MS database (model fitting and testing), we screened demographic, radiological, clinical variables, and Disability Rating Scale (DRS) item scores for association with the primary outcome. The primary outcome was death or complete functional dependency at 1-year post-injury, defined using a DRS-based binary measure (DRS ), indicating need for assistance with all activities and concomitant cognitive impairment. In the TBI-MS Discovery Sample, 1,960 subjects (mean age 40 [18] years, 76% male, 68% white) met inclusion criteria and 406 (27%) were dependent at 1-year post-injury. A dependency prediction model had an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of 0.79 [0.74, 0.85], positive predictive value of 53%, and negative predictive value of 86% for dependency in a held-out TBI-MS Testing cohort. Within the TRACK-TBI external validation sample (N=124, age 40 [16], 77% male, 81% white), a model modified to remove variables not collected in TRACK-TBI, had an AUROC of 0.66 [0.53, 0.79], equivalent to the gold-standard IMPACT score (0.68; 95% AUROC difference CI: -0.2 to 0.2, p=0.8). We used the largest existing cohort of patients with DoC after TBI to develop, test and externally validate a prediction model of 1-year dependency. The model’s sensitivity and negative predictive value were greater than specificity and positive predictive value. Accuracy was diminished in an external sample, but equivalent to the best-available models. Further research is needed to improve dependency prediction in patients with DoC after TBI.
DOI:10.1101/2023.03.14.23287249