| Literature DB >> 35937061 |
Christopher J Nowinski1, Samantha C Bureau1, Michael E Buckland2,3, Maurice A Curtis4, Daniel H Daneshvar5,6,7, Richard L M Faull4, Lea T Grinberg8,9,10,11, Elisa L Hill-Yardin12,13, Helen C Murray4, Alan J Pearce14, Catherine M Suter2,3, Adam J White15,16, Adam M Finkel17, Robert C Cantu1,18,19.
Abstract
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a neurodegenerative disease associated with a history of repetitive head impacts (RHI). CTE was described in boxers as early as the 1920s and by the 1950s it was widely accepted that hits to the head caused some boxers to become "punch drunk." However, the recent discovery of CTE in American and Australian-rules football, soccer, rugby, ice hockey, and other sports has resulted in renewed debate on whether the relationship between RHI and CTE is causal. Identifying the strength of the evidential relationship between CTE and RHI has implications for public health and medico-legal issues. From a public health perspective, environmentally caused diseases can be mitigated or prevented. Medico-legally, millions of children are exposed to RHI through sports participation; this demographic is too young to legally consent to any potential long-term risks associated with this exposure. To better understand the strength of evidence underlying the possible causal relationship between RHI and CTE, we examined the medical literature through the Bradford Hill criteria for causation. The Bradford Hill criteria, first proposed in 1965 by Sir Austin Bradford Hill, provide a framework to determine if one can justifiably move from an observed association to a verdict of causation. The Bradford Hill criteria include nine viewpoints by which to evaluate human epidemiologic evidence to determine if causation can be deduced: strength, consistency, specificity, temporality, biological gradient, plausibility, coherence, experiment, and analogy. We explored the question of causation by evaluating studies on CTE as it relates to RHI exposure. Through this lens, we found convincing evidence of a causal relationship between RHI and CTE, as well as an absence of evidence-based alternative explanations. By organizing the CTE literature through this framework, we hope to advance the global conversation on CTE mitigation efforts.Entities:
Keywords: Bradford Hill; causation; chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE); epidemiology; public health; punch drunk; repetitive head impact
Year: 2022 PMID: 35937061 PMCID: PMC9355594 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.938163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.086
Odds ratios from important case-control studies (in chronological order of publication).
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| McKee et al. ( | CTE/not | hx of TBI/matched ctrls. | 144.8 (8.3–2523.0) |
| Bieniek et al. ( | CTE/not | Contact sports/not | 91.9 (12.1–701.4) |
| Adams et al. ( | CTE/not | hx of contact sports/not | 440.1 (60.5–3203.4) |
| Bieniek et al. ( | CTE/not | hx of football/not | 2.62 (1.33–5.15) |
| Mez et al. ( | CTE/not | Years of football (<4.5 or >14.5) | 10.2 (9.8–10.7) |
| Priemer et al. ( | CTE/not | hx of contact sports/not | 68.8 (4.0–1195.2) |
In each row with an asterisk, the raw OR was infinite because there were zero cases in the unexposed group. Following the Haldane-Anscombe correction (.
This calculation, in order to be conservative, assumes that the one CTE case in Adams et al. (.
Also arguably biased low w/respect to the NFL, because the exposed group likely had no pro athletes in it, just recreational/college.
Biased low because the “unexposed” are really “low exposed”—but we see no reason to penalize this study for stratifying more finely than yes/no (they just don't have any fully unexposed, which is not a weakness).
Other important strength of association results.
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| Lehman et al. ( | Neurodegenerative COD | Former NFL v. general population | 3.26 (1.9–5.22) | 3.26 is biased low, given that SMR for all COD combined was 0.53 (a strong “healthy worker effect”)—neurodegenerative COD were especially enriched in the NFL group |
| Venkataramani et al. ( | Neurodegenerative COD | Former NFL v. former “replacement players” who played several games during the 1987 strike | 4.09 (0.23–73.3) | Non-significant OR. HWE minimized by using unexposed group fit enough to be on an NFL roster briefly; however, these (181) deaths are only those in each cohort who died in their 50s (about 5% of each group) |
| Mackay et al. ( | Neurodegenerative COD | Former pro soccer players v. age/sex matched controls | 4.1 (2.88–5.83) | |
| Nguyen et al. ( | Neurodegenerative COD (underlying or contributing cause) | Former NFL players v. former Major League Baseball players | 2.99 (1.64–5.45) | HWE eliminated by comparing athletes with/wo RHI. But only about 15% of this cohort had died as of study publication |
| Russell et al. ( | Neurodegenerative COD | Former pro soccer players v. age/sex/SES matched controls | 3.66 (2.88–4.65) | HR among defenders was >2.5 × that among goalies, suggesting a gradient with RHI |
| Daneshvar et al. ( | ALS diagnosis | All NFL players who debuted between 1960 and 2019 vs. general population rates | 3.59 (2.62–5.69) (incidence ratio) | 3.94 (2.62–5.69) (mortality ratio) |
Infinite raw OR (zero cases among “unexposed”); Haldane-Anscombe correction applied.
CTE cases diagnosed globally.
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| UNITE/VA-BU-CLF | 366 | Alosco et al. ( |
| Queen's Square Brain Bank | 32 | Ling et al. ( |
| Mayo Clinic Brain Bank | 21 | Bieniek et al. ( |
| Canadian Concussion Center | 17 | Schwab et al. ( |
| Glasgow TBI Brain Bank | 12 | Ameen-Ali et al. ( |
| Australian Sports Brain Bank | 12 | Suter et al. ( |
| DoD/USU Brain Tissue Repository | 10 | Priemer et al. ( |
| University of Washington | 3 | Postupna et al. ( |
| Biobank for Aging Studies at University of São Paulo | 1 | Grinberg et al. ( |
| Dublin Brain Bank | 1 | Stewart et al. ( |
| GIE Neuro-CEB Brain Bank | 1 | Lepreux et al. ( |
| Seoul National University Hospital Brain Bank, South Korea | 1 | Lee et al. ( |
List only includes groups understood to be using NINDS/NIBIB consensus criteria for diagnosis.
Boston University CTE Center website reports more than 700 diagnosed cases.