Sariaslan A, Sharp DJ, D'Onofrio BM, Larsson H, Fazel S.
Long-Term Outcomes
Associated with Traumatic Brain Injury in Childhood and
Adolescence: A Nationwide
Swedish Cohort Study of a Wide Range of Medical and Social
Outcomes. PLoS Med.
2016 Aug 23;13(8):e1002103.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of
disability and mortality in children and young adults worldwide. It remains
unclear, however, how TBI in childhood and adolescence is associated with adult
mortality, psychiatric morbidity, and social outcomes.
METHODS AND FINDINGS:
In a Swedish birth cohort between 1973 and 1985 of 1,143,470
individuals, we identified all those who had sustained at least one TBI (n =
104,290 or 9.1%) up to age 25 y and their unaffected siblings (n = 68,268)
using patient registers. We subsequently assessed these individuals for the
following outcomes using multiple national registries: disability pension,
specialist diagnoses of psychiatric disorders and psychiatric inpatient
hospitalisation, premature mortality (before age 41 y), low educational
attainment (not having achieved secondary school qualifications), and receiving
means-tested welfare benefits. We used logistic and Cox regression models to
quantify the association between TBI and specified adverse outcomes on the
individual level. We further estimated population attributable fractions (PAF)
for each outcome measure. We also compared differentially exposed siblings to
account for unobserved genetic and environmental confounding. In addition to
relative risk estimates, we examined absolute risks by calculating prevalence
and Kaplan-Meier estimates. In complementary analyses, we tested whether the
findings were moderated by injury severity, recurrence, and age at first injury
(ages 0-4, 5-9, 6-10, 15-19, and 20-24 y). TBI exposure was associated with
elevated risks of impaired adult functioning across all outcome measures. After
a median follow-up period of 8 y from age 26 y, we found that TBI contributed
to absolute risks of over 10% for specialist diagnoses of psychiatric disorders
and low educational attainment, approximately 5% for disability pension, and 2%
for premature mortality. The highest relative risks, adjusted for sex, birth
year, and birth order, were found for psychiatric inpatient hospitalisation
(adjusted relative risk [aRR] = 2.0; 95% CI: 1.9-2.0; 6,632 versus 37,095
events), disability pension (aRR = 1.8; 95% CI: 1.7-1.8; 4,691 versus 29,778
events), and premature mortality (aRR = 1.7; 95% CI: 1.6-1.9; 799 versus 4,695
events). These risks were only marginally attenuated when the comparisons were
made with their unaffected siblings, which implies that the effects of TBI were
consistent with a causal inference. A dose-response relationship was observed
with injury severity. Injury recurrence was also associated with higher
risks-in particular, for disability pension we found that recurrent TBI was
associated with a 3-fold risk increase (aRR = 2.6; 95% CI: 2.4-2.8) compared to
a single-episode TBI. Higher risks for all outcomes were observed for those who
had sustained their first injury at an older age (ages 20-24 y) with more than
25% increase in relative risk across all outcomes compared to the youngest age
group (ages 0-4 y). On the population level, TBI explained between 2%-6% of the
variance in the examined outcomes. Using hospital data underestimates milder
forms of TBI, but such misclassification bias suggests that the reported
estimates are likely conservative. The sibling-comparison design accounts for
unmeasured familial confounders shared by siblings, including half of their
genes. Thus, residual genetic confounding remains a possibility but will
unlikely alter our main findings, as associations were only marginally
attenuated within families.
CONCLUSIONS:
Given our findings, which indicate potentially causal
effects between TBI exposure in childhood and later impairments across a range
of health and social outcomes, age-sensitive clinical guidelines should be
considered and preventive strategies should be targeted at children and
adolescents.
Courtesy of: http://www.webmd.com/brain/news/20160824/kids-mild-brain-injury-can-have-long-term-effects#1
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