Back to Search Start Over

Advancing Concussion Assessment in Pediatrics (A-CAP): a prospective, concurrent cohort, longitudinal study of mild traumatic brain injury in children: study protocol

Authors :
Bradley G. Goodyear
Ryan E. Lamont
Quynh Doan
Francois P. Bernier
Stephen B. Freedman
Karen M. Barlow
Keith Owen Yeates
Nishard Abdeen
Roger Zemek
Tyler Williamson
Mathieu Dehaes
William Craig
Carolyn A. Emery
Jocelyn Gravel
Miriam H. Beauchamp
Kathryn J Schneider
Catherine Lebel
Angelo Mikrogianakis
Bruce Bjornson
Kristina Kowalski
Sylvain Deschenes
Christian Beaulieu
Brian L. Brooks
Kelly Mrklas
Lianne Tomfohr-Madsen
Ashley D. Harris
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2017.

Abstract

Introduction Paediatric mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a public health burden. Clinicians urgently need evidence-based guidance to manage mTBI, but gold standards for diagnosing and predicting the outcomes of mTBI are lacking. The objective of the Advancing Concussion Assessment in Pediatrics (A-CAP) study is to assess a broad pool of neurobiological and psychosocial markers to examine associations with postinjury outcomes in a large sample of children with either mTBI or orthopaedic injury (OI), with the goal of improving the diagnosis and prognostication of outcomes of paediatric mTBI. Methods and analysis A-CAP is a prospective, longitudinal cohort study of children aged 8.00–16.99 years with either mTBI or OI, recruited during acute emergency department (ED) visits at five sites from the Pediatric Emergency Research Canada network. Injury information is collected in the ED; follow-up assessments at 10 days and 3 and 6 months postinjury measure a variety of neurobiological and psychosocial markers, covariates/confounders and outcomes. Weekly postconcussive symptom ratings are obtained electronically. Recruitment began in September 2016 and will occur for approximately 24 months. Analyses will test the major hypotheses that neurobiological and psychosocial markers can: (1) differentiate mTBI from OI and (2) predict outcomes of mTBI. Models initially will focus within domains (eg, genes, imaging biomarkers, psychosocial markers), followed by multivariable modelling across domains. The planned sample size (700 mTBI, 300 OI) provides adequate statistical power and allows for internal cross-validation of some analyses. Ethics and dissemination The ethics boards at all participating institutions have approved the study and all participants and their parents will provide informed consent or assent. Dissemination will follow an integrated knowledge translation plan, with study findings presented at scientific conferences and in multiple manuscripts in peer-reviewed journals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
7
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b72eb6739648d3939840b1fed95e3543