Litcius/Paper detail

Comparison of Clinical Outcomes 1 and 5 Years Post-Injury Following Combat Concussion

Christine L. Mac Donald, Jason Barber, Jana N. Patterson, Ann M. Johnson, Carolyn M. Parsey, Beverly Scott, Jesse R. Fann, Nancy Temkin

2020Neurology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

<h3>Objective</h3> To compare 1-year and 5-year clinical outcomes in 2 groups of combat-deployed service members without brain injury to those of 2 groups with combat-related concussion to better understand long-term clinical outcome trajectories. <h3>Methods</h3> This prospective, observational, longitudinal multicohort study examined 4 combat-deployed groups: controls without head injury with or without blast exposure and patients with combat concussion arising from blast or blunt trauma. One-year and 5-year clinical evaluations included identical batteries for neurobehavioral, psychiatric, and cognitive outcomes. A total of 347 participants completed both time points of evaluation. Cross-sectional and longitudinal comparisons were assessed. Overall group effect was modeled as a 4-category variable with rank regression adjusting for demographic factors using a 2-sided significance threshold of 0.05, with post hoc Tukey <i>p</i> values calculated for the pairwise comparisons. <h3>Results</h3> Significant group differences in both combat concussion groups were identified cross-sectionally at 5-year follow-up compared to controls in neurobehavioral (Neurobehavioral Rating Scale–Revised [NRS]; Cohen <i>d</i>, −1.10 to −1.40, confidence intervals [CIs] [−0.82, −1.32] to [−0.97, −1.83] by group) and psychiatric domains (Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-IV [CAPS]; Cohen <i>d</i>, −0.91 to −1.19, CIs [−0.63, −1.19] to [−0.76, −1.62] by group) symptoms with minimal differences in cognitive performance. Both combat concussion groups also showed clinically significant decline from 1- to 5-year evaluation (66%–76% neurobehavioral NRS; 41%–54% psychiatric CAPS by group). Both control groups fared better but a subset also had clinically significant decline (37%–50% neurobehavioral NRS; 9%–25% psychiatric CAPS by group). <h3>Conclusions</h3> There was an evolution, not resolution, of symptoms from 1- to 5-year evaluation, challenging the assumption that chronic stages of concussive injury are relatively stable. Even some of the combat-deployed controls worsened. The evidence supports new considerations for chronic trajectories of concussion outcome in combat-deployed service members.

Topics & Concepts

ConcussionMedicinePost-concussion syndromeObservational studyPost-hoc analysisTraumatic brain injuryPoison controlPsychologyPhysical therapyInjury preventionPsychiatryInternal medicineEmergency medicineTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchTraumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular DisturbancesStroke Rehabilitation and Recovery
Comparison of Clinical Outcomes 1 and 5 Years Post-Injury Following Combat Concussion | Litcius