Guidelines for neuroprognostication in adults with traumatic spinal cord injury

Background Traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI) impacts patients and their families acutely and often for the long term. The ability of clinicians to share prognostic information about mortality and functional outcomes allows patients and their surrogates to engage in decision-making and plan for the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurocritical care 2024-04, Vol.40 (2), p.415-437
Hauptverfasser: Mahanes, Dea, Muehlschlegel, Susanne, Wartenberg, Katja E., Rajajee, Venkatakrishna, Alexander, Sheila A., Busl, Katharina M., Creutzfeldt, Claire J., Fontaine, Gabriel V., Hocker, Sara E., Hwang, David Y., Kim, Keri S., Madzar, Dominik, Mainali, Shraddha, Meixensberger, Juergen, Varelas, Panayiotis N., Weimar, Christian, Westermaier, Thomas, Sakowitz, Oliver W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI) impacts patients and their families acutely and often for the long term. The ability of clinicians to share prognostic information about mortality and functional outcomes allows patients and their surrogates to engage in decision-making and plan for the future. These guidelines provide recommendations on the reliability of acute-phase clinical predictors to inform neuroprognostication and guide clinicians in counseling adult patients with tSCI or their surrogates. Methods A narrative systematic review was completed using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation methodology. Candidate predictors, including clinical variables and prediction models, were selected based on clinical relevance and presence of an appropriate body of evidence. The Population/Intervention/Comparator/Outcome/Timing/Setting question was framed as “When counseling patients or surrogates of critically ill patients with traumatic spinal cord injury, should  be considered a reliable predictor of ?” Additional full-text screening criteria were used to exclude small and lower quality studies. Following construction of an evidence profile and summary of findings, recommendations were based on four Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation criteria: quality of evidence, balance of desirable and undesirable consequences, values and preferences, and resource use. Good practice recommendations addressed essential principles of neuroprognostication that could not be framed in the Population/Intervention/Comparator/Outcome/Timing/Setting format. Throughout the guideline development process, an individual living with tSCI provided perspective on patient-centered priorities. Results Six candidate clinical variables and one prediction model were selected. Out of 11,132 articles screened, 369 met inclusion criteria for full-text review and 35 articles met eligibility criteria to guide recommendations. We recommend pathologic findings on magnetic resonance imaging, neurological level of injury, and severity of injury as moderately reliable predictors of American Spinal Cord Injury Impairment Scale improvement and the Dutch Clinical Prediction Rule as a moderately reliable prediction model of independent ambulation at 1 year after injury. No other reliable or moderately reliable predictors of mortality or functio
ISSN:1541-6933
1556-0961
1556-0961
DOI:10.1007/s12028-023-01845-8