The Therapy Intensity Level scale for traumatic brain injury: clinimetric assessment on neuro-monitored patients across 52 European intensive care units.

Bhattacharyay, Shubhayu; Beqiri, Erta; Zuercher, Patrick; Wilson, Lindsay; Steyerberg, Ewout; Nelson, David W; Maas, Andrew; Menon, David; Ercole, Ari (2024). The Therapy Intensity Level scale for traumatic brain injury: clinimetric assessment on neuro-monitored patients across 52 European intensive care units. Journal of neurotrauma, 41(7-8), pp. 887-909. M.A. Liebert 10.1089/neu.2023.0377

[img] Text
neu.2023.0377.pdf - Accepted Version
Restricted to registered users only
Available under License Publisher holds Copyright.

Download (2MB) | Request a copy

Intracranial pressure (ICP) data from traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) cannot be interpreted appropriately without accounting for the effect of administered therapy intensity level (TIL) on ICP. A 15-point scale was originally proposed in 1987 to quantify the hourly intensity of ICP-targeted treatment. This scale was subsequently modified &ndash; through expert consensus &ndash; during the development of TBI Common Data Elements to address statistical limitations and improve usability. The latest, 38-point scale (hereafter referred to as TIL) permits integrated scoring for a 24-hour period and has a five-category, condensed version (TIL(Basic)) based on qualitative assessment. Here, we perform a total- and component-score analysis of TIL and TIL(Basic) to: (1) validate the scales across the wide variation in contemporary ICP management, (2) compare their performance against that of predecessors, and (3) derive guidelines for proper scale use. From the observational Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in TBI (CENTER-TBI) study, we extract clinical data from a prospective cohort of ICP-monitored TBI patients (<em>n</em>=873) from 52 ICUs across 19 countries. We calculate daily TIL and TIL(Basic) scores (TIL24 and TIL(Basic)24, respectively) from each patient&rsquo;s first week of ICU stay. We also calculate summary TIL and TIL(Basic) scores by taking the first-week maximum (TILmax and TIL(Basic)max) and first-week median (TILmedian and TIL(Basic)median) of TIL24 and TIL(Basic)24 scores for each patient. We find that, across all measures of construct and criterion validity, the latest TIL scale performs significantly greater than or similarly to all alternative scales (including TIL(Basic)) and integrates the widest range of modern ICP treatments. TILmedian outperforms both TILmax and summarised ICP values in detecting refractory intracranial hypertension (RICH) during ICU stay. The RICH detection thresholds which maximise the sum of sensitivity and specificity are TILmedian&ge;7.5 and TILmax&ge;14. The TIL24 threshold which maximises the sum of sensitivity and specificity in the detection of surgical ICP control is TIL24&ge;9. The median scores of each TIL component therapy over increasing TIL24 reflect a credible staircase approach to treatment intensity escalation, from head positioning to surgical ICP control, as well as considerable variability in the use of cerebrospinal fluid drainage and decompressive craniectomy. Since TIL(Basic)max suffers from a strong statistical ceiling effect and only covers 17% (95% CI: 16&ndash;18%) of the information in TILmax, TIL(Basic) should not be used instead of TIL for rating maximum treatment intensity. TIL(Basic)24 and TIL(Basic)median can be suitable replacements for TIL24 and TILmedian, respectively (with up to 33% [95% CI: 31&ndash;35%] information coverage) when TIL assessment is infeasible. Accordingly, we derive numerical ranges for categorising TIL24 scores into TIL(Basic)24 scores. In conclusion, our results validate TIL across a spectrum of ICP management and monitoring approaches. TIL is a more sensitive surrogate for pathophysiology than ICP...

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine and Anaesthesiology (DINA) > Clinic of Intensive Care

UniBE Contributor:

Zürcher, Patrick

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

0897-7151

Publisher:

M.A. Liebert

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

05 Oct 2023 15:37

Last Modified:

10 Apr 2024 00:12

Publisher DOI:

10.1089/neu.2023.0377

PubMed ID:

37795563

Uncontrolled Keywords:

ASSESSMENT TOOLS CLINICAL MANAGEMENT OF CNS INJURY INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES FOR THE TREATMENT OF CNS INJURY TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/186928

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/186928

Actions (login required)

Edit item Edit item
Provide Feedback