Use and impact of high intensity treatments in patients with traumatic brain injury across Europe: a CENTER-TBI analysis




Huijben Jilske A, Dixit Abhishek, Stocchetti Nino, Maas Andrew IR, Lingsma Hester F, van der Jagt Mathieu, Nelson David, Citerio Giuseppe, Wilson Lindsay, Menon David K, Ercole Ari; the CENTER-TBI investigators and participants

PublisherBMC

2021

Critical Care

CRITICAL CARE

CRIT CARE

ARTN 78

25

13

1364-8535

1466-609X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-020-03370-y

https://ccforum.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13054-020-03370-y



Purpose: To study variation in, and clinical impact of high Therapy Intensity Level (TIL) treatments for elevated intracranial pressure (ICP) in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) across European Intensive Care Units (ICUs).

Methods: We studied high TIL treatments (metabolic suppression, hypothermia (<35 degrees C), intensive hyperventilation (PaCO2 < 4 kPa), and secondary decompressive craniectomy) in patients receiving ICP monitoring in the ICU stratum of the CENTER-TBI study. A random effect logistic regression model was used to determine between-centre variation in their use. A propensity score-matched model was used to study the impact on outcome (6-months Glasgow Outcome Score-extended (GOSE)), whilst adjusting for case-mix severity, signs of brain herniation on imaging, and ICP.

Results: 313 of 758 patients from 52 European centres (41%) received at least one high TIL treatment with significant variation between centres (median odds ratio =2.26). Patients often transiently received high TIL therapies without escalation from lower tier treatments. 38% of patients with high TIL treatment had favourable outcomes (GOSE >= 5). The use of high TIL treatment was not significantly associated with worse outcome (285 matched pairs, OR 1.4, 95% CI [1.0-2.0]). However, a sensitivity analysis excluding high TIL treatments at day 1 or use of metabolic suppression at any day did reveal a statistically significant association with worse outcome.

Conclusion: Substantial between-centre variation in use of high TIL treatments for TBI was found and treatment escalation to higher TIL treatments were often not preceded by more conventional lower TIL treatments. The significant association between high TIL treatments after day 1 and worse outcomes may reflect aggressive use or unmeasured confounders or inappropriate escalation strategies.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 14:25