| Literature DB >> 24927811 |
Franz E Babl1, Mark D Lyttle, Silvia Bressan, Meredith Borland, Natalie Phillips, Amit Kochar, Stuart R Dalziel, Sarah Dalton, John A Cheek, Jeremy Furyk, Yuri Gilhotra, Jocelyn Neutze, Brenton Ward, Susan Donath, Kim Jachno, Louise Crowe, Amanda Williams, Ed Oakley.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Head injuries in children are responsible for a large number of emergency department visits. Failure to identify a clinically significant intracranial injury in a timely fashion may result in long term neurodisability and death. Whilst cranial computed tomography (CT) provides rapid and definitive identification of intracranial injuries, it is resource intensive and associated with radiation induced cancer. Evidence based head injury clinical decision rules have been derived to aid physicians in identifying patients at risk of having a clinically significant intracranial injury. Three rules have been identified as being of high quality and accuracy: the Canadian Assessment of Tomography for Childhood Head Injury (CATCH) from Canada, the Children's Head Injury Algorithm for the Prediction of Important Clinical Events (CHALICE) from the UK, and the prediction rule for the identification of children at very low risk of clinically important traumatic brain injury developed by the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) from the USA. This study aims to prospectively validate and compare the performance accuracy of these three clinical decision rules when applied outside the derivation setting. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24927811 PMCID: PMC4074143 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-14-148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Comparison of predictor variables[11,15-17]
| Dangerous mechanism of injury (eg MVC, fall from elevation ≥3 ft [≥0.91 m] or 5 stairs, fall from bicycle with no helmet). | High speed RTA as pedestrian, cyclist, occupant (>40 miles/h or >64 km/h). | Severe mechanism of injury (MVC with patient ejection, death of another passenger or rollover; pedestrian/bicyclist without helmet struck by motorized vehicle; falls >0.9 m; head struck by high impact object). | Severe mechanism of injury (MVC with patient ejection, death of another passenger or rollover; pedestrian/bicyclist without helmet struck by motorized vehicle; falls >1.5 m; head struck by high impact object). |
| Fall of > 3 m in height. | |||
| High speed injury from projectile or object. | |||
| | Witnessed LOC > 5 min. | LOC ≥5 seconds. | Any/suspected LOC. |
| | Amnesia (antegrade or retrograde) >5 min. | | |
| | | Altered mental status. | Altered mental status. |
| | | Not acting normally per parent. | |
| | ≥3 vomits after head injury (discrete episodes). | | History of vomiting. |
| | Suspicion of NAI. | | |
| | Seizure in patient with no history of epilepsy. | | |
| History of worsening headache. | | | Severe headache. |
| GCS <15, 2 hr after injury. | GCS <14, or <15 if <1 yr. | GCS < 15 | GCS < 15 |
| Irritability on examination. | Abnormal drowsiness (in excess of that expected by examining doctor). | Other signs of altered mental status (agitation, somnolence, repetitive questioning, slow response to verbal communication) | Other signs of altered mental status (agitation, somnolence, repetitive questioning, slow response to verbal communication) |
| Suspected open or depressed skull fracture. | Suspicion of penetrating or depressed skull injury, or tense fontanelle. | | |
| Any sign of basal skull fracture (eg haemotympanum, “raccoon” eyes, otorrhoea/rhinorrhoea of CSF, Battle’s sign). | Signs of basal skull fracture. | Palpable or unclear skull fracture. | Clinical signs of basilar skull fracture. |
| | Positive focal neurology. | | |
| Large boggy haematoma of the scalp. | Presence of bruise, swelling or laceration > 5 cm if < 1 yr old. | Occipital, parietal or temporal scalp haematoma. | |
Reproduced from Lyttle M, et al.[15] Copyright 2012, with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
In each of the three clinical decision rules (CDRs) the absence of all of the above predictor variables indicates that cranial computed tomography is unnecessary.
Note: while the predictor variables are reproduced verbatim, the order in which the variables from each CDR are presented has been altered to facilitate comparison.
CATCH Canadian Assessment of Tomography for Childhood Head Injury.
CHALICE Children’s Head Injury Algorithm for the Prediction of Important Clinical Events.
PECARN Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network.
MVC Motor vehicle crash.
RTA Road traffic accident.
LOC Loss of consciousness.
NAI Non-accidental injury.
GCS Glasgow Coma Score.
CSF Cerebrospinal fluid.
Comparison of inclusion and exclusion criteria[11,15-17]
| • Blunt trauma to head resulting in witnessed LOC/disorientation, definite amnesia, persistent vomiting (>1 episode), persistent irritability (in children <2 yrs) | • Obvious penetrating skull injury | |
| • Obvious depressed fracture | ||
| • Acute focal neurologic deficit | ||
| • Chronic generalized developmental delay | ||
| • Head injury secondary to suspected child abuse | ||
| • Initial GCS in ED ≥13 as determined by treating physician | • Returning for reassessment of previously treated head injury | |
| • Injury within the past 24 hours. | • Patients who were pregnant | |
| Any history or signs of injury to the head. | Refusal to consent | |
| Present within 24 hours of head injury. | ||
| • Trivial head injury (defined by ground level fall, walking/running into stationary object, no signs or symptoms of head trauma except scalp abrasions and lacerations). | ||
| • Penetrating trauma | ||
| • Known brain tumour | ||
| • Pre-existing neurological disorder complicating assessment | ||
| • Neuro-imaging at another hospital before transfer | ||
| • Patient with ventricular shunt* | ||
| • Patient with bleeding disorder* | ||
| • GCS < 14* |
Reproduced from Lyttle M, et al.[15] Copyright 2012, with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
CATCH Canadian Assessment of Tomography for Childhood Head Injury.
CHALICE Children’s Head Injury Algorithm for the Prediction of Important Clinical Events
PECARN Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network.
GCS Glasgow Coma Score.
LOC Loss of consciousness.
ED emergency department.
*enrolled but being analysed separately, not used in clinical decision rule derivation.
Comparison of outcomes[11,15-17]
| CATCH | Need for neurological intervention, defined as death within 7 days secondary to the head injury or need for any of the following within 7 days: craniotomy, elevation of skull fracture, monitoring of intracranial pressure, insertion of endotracheal tube for the management of head injury | Brain injury on CT, defined as any acute intracranial finding revealed on CT attributable to acute injury, including closed depressed skull fracture (depressed past the inner table) and pneumocephalus but excluding non-depressed skull fractures and basilar skull fractures |
| CHALICE | Clinically significant intracranial injury (CSII), defined as death as a result of head injury, requirement for neurosurgical intervention, marked abnormality on CT (any new, acute, traumatic intracranial pathology as reported by consultant radiologist, including intracranial haematomas of any size, cerebral contusion, diffuse cerebral oedema and depressed skull fractures) | Presence of skull fracture Admission to hospital |
| PECARN | Clinically important traumatic brain injury (ciTBI), defined as death from TBI, neurosurgical intervention for TBI (intracranial pressure monitoring, elevation of depressed skull fracture, ventriculostomy, haematoma evacuation, lobectomy, tissue debridement, dura repair, other), intubation of more than 24 h for TBI or hospital admission of 2 nights or more for TBI* in association with TBI on CT** | None |
Reproduced from Lyttle M, et al.[15] Copyright 2012, with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
*Admission for persistent neurological symptoms or signs such as persistent alteration in mental status, recurrent emesis due to head injury, persistent severe headache or ongoing seizure management.
**Intracranial haemorrhage or contusion, cerebral oedema, traumatic infarction, diffuse axonal injury, shearing injury, sigmoid sinus thrombosis, midline shift of intracranial contents or signs of brain herniation, diastasis of the skull, pneumocephalus, skull fracture depressed by at least the width of the table of the skull.
CATCH Canadian Assessment of Tomography for Childhood Head Injury.
CHALICE Children’s Head Injury Algorithm for the Prediction of Important Clinical Events.
PECARN Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network.
CT computed tomography.
Figure 1Algorithm for patient eligibility and analysis. *Head injuries not including trivial facial injuries defined as a ground level fall or walking or running into an object with no signs or symptoms of injury other than facial abrasions or lacerations below the eyebrows. CT computed tomography. LTFU lost to follow up. CHALICE Children’s Head Injury Algorithm for the Prediction of Important Clinical Events. CATCH Canadian Assessment of Tomography for Childhood Head Injury. PECARN Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network.
Projected sensitivity for outcomes of clinically important traumatic brain injury (ciTBI), need for neurosurgery and brain injury on computed tomography (CT) based on PECARN data[17]
| ciTBI | 50 | 50/50 | 100 | 93-100 |
| 50 | 49/50 | 98 | 89-100 | |
| 50 | 48/50 | 96 | 86-99.5 | |
| 50 | 47/50 | 94 | 83-99 | |
| Need for neurosurgery | 30 | 30/30 | 100 | 88-100 |
| 30 | 29/30 | 96.5 | 83-100 | |
| Brain injury on CT | 300 | 300/300 | 100 | 98.8-100 |
| 300 | 290/300 | 97 | 94-98 |
CDR clinical decision rule.