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Accuracy of Early Neuroprognostication in Pediatric Severe Traumatic Brain Injury.

Authors :
Sampat, Varun
Whitinger IV, John
Flynn-O'Brien, Katherine
Kim, Irene
Balakrishnan, Binod
Mehta, Niyati
Sawdy, Rachel
Patel, Namrata D.
Nallamothu, Rupa
Zhang, Liyun
Yan, Ke
Zvara, Kimberley
Farias-Moeller, Raquel
Source :
Pediatric Neurology. Jun2024, Vol. 155, p36-43. 8p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Children with severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI) are at risk for neurological sequelae impacting function. Clinicians are tasked with neuroprognostication to assist in decision-making. We describe a single-center study assessing clinicians' neuroprognostication accuracy. Clinicians of various specialties caring for children with sTBI were asked to predict their patients' functioning three to six months postinjury. Clinicians were asked to participate in the study if their patient had survived but not returned to baseline between day 4 and 7 postinjury. The outcome tool utilized was the functional status scale (FSS), ranging from 6 to 30 (best-worst function). Predicted scores were compared with actual scores three to six months postinjury. Lin concordance correlation coefficients were used to estimate agreement between predicted and actual FSS. Outcome was dichotomized as good (FSS 6 to 8) or poor (FSS ≥9). Positive and negative predictive values for poor outcome were calculated. Pessimistic prognostic prediction was defined as predicted worse outcome by ≥3 FSS points. Demographic and clinical variables were collected. A total of 107 surveys were collected on 24 patients. Two children died. Fifteen children had complete (FSS = 6) or near-complete (FSS = 7) recovery. Mean predicted and actual FSS scores were 10.8 (S.D. 5.6) and 8.6 (S.D. 4.1), respectively. Predicted FSS scores were higher than actual scores (P < 0.001). Eight children had collective pessimistic prognostic prediction. Clinicians predicted worse functional outcomes, despite high percentage of patients with near-normal function at follow-up clinic. Certain patient and provider factors were noted to impact accuracy and need to be studied in larger cohorts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08878994
Volume :
155
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Pediatric Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177318455
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2024.03.010