AI Article Synopsis

  • Pediatric mild traumatic brain injury (pmTBI) and persistent post-concussive symptoms (PPCS) have become more scrutinized, revealing various methods for defining PPCS, leading to confusion and inconsistencies in symptom reporting.* -
  • A study on 162 pmTBI patients and 117 healthy controls assessed the reliability of six PPCS definitions over time, showing significant misclassification rates and biases in symptom reporting, especially among parents and adolescents.* -
  • The findings suggest that self-reported symptoms in adolescents are not very reliable, complicating efforts to accurately determine recovery from concussions and the actual rates of PPCS in research.*

Article Abstract

Pediatric mild traumatic brain injury (pmTBI) has received increased public scrutiny over the past decade, especially regarding children who experience persistent post-concussive symptoms (PPCS). However, several methods for defining PPCS exist in clinical and scientific literature, and even healthy children frequently exhibit non-specific, concussive-like symptoms. Inter-method agreement (six PPCS methods), observed misclassification rates, and other psychometric properties were examined in large cohorts of consecutively recruited adolescent patients with pmTBI ( = 162) 1 week and 4 months post-injury and in age/sex-matched healthy controls (HC;  = 117) at equivalent time intervals. Six published PPCS methods were stratified into Simple Change (e.g., , 10th revision [ICD-10]) and Standardized Change (e.g., reliable change indices) algorithms. Among HC, test-retest reliability was fair to good across the 4-month assessment window, with evidence of bias (i.e., higher symptom ratings) during retrospective relative to other assessments. Misclassification rates among HC were higher (>30%) for Simple Change algorithms, with poor inter-rater reliability of symptom burden across HC and their parents. A 49% spread existed in terms of the proportion of pmTBI patients "diagnosed" with PPCS at 4 months, with superior inter-method agreement among standardized change algorithms. In conclusion, the self-reporting of symptom burden is only modestly reliable in typically developing adolescents over a 4-month period, with additional evidence for systematic bias in both adolescent and parental ratings. Significant variation existed for identifying pmTBI patients who had "recovered" (i.e., those who did not meet individual criteria for PPCS) from concussion across the six definitions, representing a considerable challenge for estimating the true incidence rate of PPCS in published literature. Although relatively straightforward to obtain, current findings question the utility of the most commonly used Simple Change scores for diagnosis of PPCS in clinical settings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7307699PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/neu.2019.6805DOI Listing

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