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Phenotyping the Spectrum of Traumatic Brain Injury: A Review and Pathway to Standardization

Mary Jo Pugh, Eamonn Kennedy, Eric M. Prager, Jeffrey Humpherys, Kristen Dams-O’Connor, Dallas C. Hack, Mary Katherine McCafferty, Jessica Wolfe, Kristine Yaffe, Michael McCrea, Adam R. Ferguson, Lee Lancashire, Jamshid Ghajar, Angela Lumba‐Brown

2021Journal of Neurotrauma60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

It is widely appreciated that the spectrum of traumatic brain injury (TBI), mild through severe, contains distinct clinical presentations, variably referred to as subtypes, phenotypes, and/or clinical profiles. As part of the Brain Trauma Blueprint TBI State of the Science, we review the current literature on TBI phenotyping with an emphasis on unsupervised methodological approaches, and describe five phenotypes that appear similar across reports. However, we also find the literature contains divergent analysis strategies, inclusion criteria, findings, and use of terms. Further, whereas some studies delineate phenotypes within a specific severity of TBI, others derive phenotypes across the full spectrum of severity. Together, these facts confound direct synthesis of the findings. To overcome this, we introduce PhenoBench, a freely available code repository for the standardization and evaluation of raw phenotyping data. With this review and toolset, we provide a pathway toward robust, data-driven phenotypes that can capture the heterogeneity of TBI, enabling reproducible insights and targeted care.

Topics & Concepts

Traumatic brain injuryStandardizationPhenotypeBlueprintNeuroscienceBroad spectrumMedicineNeuroimagingPsychologyBioinformaticsComputer sciencePsychiatryBiologyGeneticsEngineeringChemistryCombinatorial chemistryOperating systemMechanical engineeringGeneTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchTraumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular DisturbancesFrailty in Older Adults
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