TY - JOUR
T1 - The Australian Traumatic Brain Injury Initiative
T2 - systematic review and consensus process to determine the predictive value of demographic, injury event, and social characteristics on outcomes for people with moderate-severe traumatic brain injury
AU - Gabbe, Belinda J.
AU - Keeves, Jemma
AU - Mckimmie, Ancelin
AU - Gadowski, Adelle M.
AU - Holland, Andrew J.
AU - Semple, Bridgette D.
AU - Young, Jesse T.
AU - Crowe, Louise
AU - Ownsworth, Tamara
AU - Bagg, Matthew K.
AU - Antonic-Baker, Ana
AU - Hicks, Amelia J.
AU - Hill, Regina
AU - Curtis, Kate
AU - Romero, Lorena
AU - Ponsford, Jennie L.
AU - Lannin, Natasha A.
AU - O'Brien, Terence J.
AU - Cameron, Peter A.
AU - Cooper, D. Jamie
AU - Rushworth, Nick
AU - Fitzgerald, Melinda
AU - AUS-TBI Initiative Investigators
AU - Alexander, Tara
AU - Anderson, Vicki
AU - Armstrong, Elizabeth
AU - Babl, Franz E.
AU - Balogh, Zsolt J.
AU - Barlow, Karen M.
AU - Bellapart, Judith
AU - Bidargaddi, Niranjan
AU - Bosio, Erika
AU - Bragge, Peter
AU - Bynevelt, Michael
AU - Caeyenberghs, Karen
AU - Capell, Jacquelin
AU - Chai, Kevin E.K.
AU - Collins-Praino, Lyndsey E.
AU - Cooper, D. J. Jamie
AU - Cowen, Gill
AU - Crowe, Louise M.
AU - Cudmore, Tim
AU - Cullen, Jennifer
AU - Delaney, Anthony
AU - Eades, Sandra
AU - Egan, Gary F.
AU - Ellis, Daniel Y.
AU - Ercole, Ari
AU - Fatovich, Daniel M.
AU - Fisher, Murray J.
AU - Fitzgerald, Mark
AU - Fleming, Jennifer
AU - Francis, Roslyn
AU - Gilroy, John
AU - Hansen, Mitchell A.
AU - Harrison, James E.
AU - Haseler, Luke J.
AU - Hassett, Leanne
AU - Hellewell, Sarah C.
AU - Hill, Andrew F.
AU - Holland, Andrew J. A.
AU - Jeffree, Rosalind L.
AU - Joyce, Chris
AU - Kendall, Elizabeth
AU - King, Kate
AU - Maas, Andrew I. R.
AU - Mahoney, Adam
AU - Makin, Peter
AU - Mayhew, Peter
AU - McDonald, Alison
AU - McDonald, Skye
AU - McDonald, Stuart J.
AU - Mcnamara, Robert
AU - Meka, Shiv
AU - Menon, David K.
AU - Mitchell, Gary
AU - Mobbs, Rowena
AU - Nasrallah, Fatima A.
AU - Newcombe, Virginia F. J.
AU - Olver, John H.
AU - O'Reilly, Gerard M.
AU - Parizel, Paul M.
AU - Parr, Michael
AU - Powell, Bruce
AU - Ratajczak, Patricia
AU - Varma, Dinesh
AU - Vickers, James
AU - Wagland, Janet
AU - Walsham, James
AU - Wells, Adam J.
AU - Whiley, Luke
AU - Williams, Gavin
AU - Williams, Jodie K.
AU - Witham, Roslind
AU - Wright, David K.
AU - York, Louise
AU - Zeeman, Heidi
AU - Scheinberg, Adam
AU - Teague, Warwick J.
AU - Robertson, Julia
AU - Honeybul, Stephen
PY - 2025/11
Y1 - 2025/11
N2 - The objective of the Australian Traumatic Brain Injury (AUS-TBI) Initiative is to develop a data dictionary to inform data collection and facilitate prediction of outcomes of people who experience moderate-severe TBI in Australia. The aim of this systematic review was to summarize the evidence of the association between demographic, injury event, and social characteristics with outcomes, in people with moderate-severe TBI, to identify potentially predictive indicators Standardized searches were implemented across bibliographic databases to March 31, 2022. English-language reports, excluding case series, which evaluated the association between demographic, injury event, and social characteristics, and any clinical outcome in at least 10 patients with moderate-severe TBI were included. Abstracts and full text records were independently screened by at least two reviewers in Covidence. A predefined algorithmwas used to assign a judgement of predictive value to each observed association. The review findings were discussed with an expert panel to determine the feasibility of incorporation of routine measurement into standard care. The search strategy retrieved 16,685 records; 867 full-length records were screened, and 111 studies included. Twenty-two predictors of 32 different outcomes were identified; 7 were classified as high-level (age, sex, ethnicity, employment, insurance, education, and living situation at the time of injury). After discussion with an expert consensus group, 15 were recommended for inclusion in the data dictionary. This review identified numerous predictors capable of enabling early identification of those at risk for poor outcomes and improved personalization of care through inclusion in routine data collection.
AB - The objective of the Australian Traumatic Brain Injury (AUS-TBI) Initiative is to develop a data dictionary to inform data collection and facilitate prediction of outcomes of people who experience moderate-severe TBI in Australia. The aim of this systematic review was to summarize the evidence of the association between demographic, injury event, and social characteristics with outcomes, in people with moderate-severe TBI, to identify potentially predictive indicators Standardized searches were implemented across bibliographic databases to March 31, 2022. English-language reports, excluding case series, which evaluated the association between demographic, injury event, and social characteristics, and any clinical outcome in at least 10 patients with moderate-severe TBI were included. Abstracts and full text records were independently screened by at least two reviewers in Covidence. A predefined algorithmwas used to assign a judgement of predictive value to each observed association. The review findings were discussed with an expert panel to determine the feasibility of incorporation of routine measurement into standard care. The search strategy retrieved 16,685 records; 867 full-length records were screened, and 111 studies included. Twenty-two predictors of 32 different outcomes were identified; 7 were classified as high-level (age, sex, ethnicity, employment, insurance, education, and living situation at the time of injury). After discussion with an expert consensus group, 15 were recommended for inclusion in the data dictionary. This review identified numerous predictors capable of enabling early identification of those at risk for poor outcomes and improved personalization of care through inclusion in routine data collection.
KW - brain injuries, culture
KW - common data elements
KW - demography
KW - outcome assessment, health care
KW - social factors
KW - systematic review [publication type]
KW - traumatic
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85187683900
U2 - 10.1089/neu.2023.0461
DO - 10.1089/neu.2023.0461
M3 - Review article
C2 - 38115598
AN - SCOPUS:85187683900
SN - 0897-7151
VL - 42
SP - 2096
EP - 2115
JO - Journal of Neurotrauma
JF - Journal of Neurotrauma
IS - 21-22
ER -