Back to Search Start Over

Glasgow Outcome Scale Measures and Impact on Analysis and Results of a Randomized Clinical Trial of Severe Traumatic Brain Injury.

Authors :
Yamal JM
Hannay HJ
Gopinath S
Aisiku IP
Benoit JS
Robertson CS
Source :
Journal of neurotrauma [J Neurotrauma] 2019 Sep 01; Vol. 36 (17), pp. 2484-2492. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 May 23.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The original unstructured Glasgow Outcome Scale (uGOS) and the newer structured interviews GOS and the Extended GOS (GOS-E) have been used widely as outcomes in severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) trials. We compared outcome categories (ranging from dead [D] to good recovery [GR]) for each measure in a randomized trial of transfusion threshold and the implications of measure choice and analysis methods for the results of the trial. We planned to explore patient symptomology possibly driving any discrepancies between the patient's uGOS and GOS scores. Category correspondence between uGOS and GOS scores occurred in 160 (88.4%) of the 181 analyzed cases. The GOS-E and GOS instruments incorporated more behavioral/cognitive/social and other components, leading to a worse outcome in some cases than for the uGOS. Choice of outcome measure and analysis led to incongruous conclusions. Dichotomizing uGOS into favorable outcome (GR and moderate disability [MD] categories) versus unfavorable (severe disability [SD], vegetative state [VS], and D categories), we observed a significant effect of transfusion threshold (odds ratio [OR] = 0.51, p  = 0.03; adjusted OR = 0.40, p  = 0.02). For the same dichotomization of GOS and GOS-E, the effect was not statistically significant but the ORs were similar (ORs between 0.57 and 0.68, p  > 0.15 for all). An effect was not detected using ordinal logistic regression or sliding dichotomy method for all three measures. Differences in categorizations of subjects between moderate and severe disability among the scales impacted conclusions of the trial. In future studies, particular attention should be given to implementing GOS measures and describing the methodology for how outcomes were ascertained.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1557-9042
Volume :
36
Issue :
17
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of neurotrauma
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30973053
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/neu.2018.5939