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Age and sex-mediated differences in six-month outcomes after mild traumatic brain injury in young adults: a TRACK-TBI study.
- Yue, John K;
- Levin, Harvey S;
- Suen, Catherine G;
- Morrissey, Molly Rose;
- Runyon, Sarah J;
- Winkler, Ethan A;
- Puffer, Ross C;
- Deng, Hansen;
- Robinson, Caitlin K;
- Rick, Jonathan W;
- Phelps, Ryan RL;
- Sharma, Sourabh;
- Taylor, Sabrina R;
- Vassar, Mary J;
- Cnossen, Maryse C;
- Lingsma, Hester F;
- Gardner, Raquel C;
- Temkin, Nancy R;
- Barber, Jason;
- Dikmen, Sureyya S;
- Yuh, Esther L;
- Mukherjee, Pratik;
- Stein, Murray B;
- Cage, Tene A;
- Valadka, Alex B;
- Okonkwo, David O;
- Manley, Geoffrey T;
- TRACK-TBI Investigators
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1080/01616412.2019.1602312Abstract
Introduction: Risk factors for young adults with mTBI are not well understood. Improved understanding of age and sex as risk factors for impaired six-month outcomes in young adults is needed. Methods: Young adult mTBI subjects aged 18-39 years (18-29y; 30-39y) with six-month outcomes were extracted from the Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury Pilot (TRACK-TBI Pilot) study. Multivariable regressions were performed for outcomes with age, sex, and the interaction factor age-group*sex as variables of interest, controlling for demographic and injury variables. Mean-differences (B) and 95% CIs are reported. Results: One hundred mTBI subjects (18-29y, 70%; 30-39y, 30%; male, 71%; female, 29%) met inclusion criteria. On multivariable analysis, age-group*sex was associated with six-month post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD; PTSD Checklist-Civilian version); compared with female 30-39y, female 18-29y (B= -19.55 [-26.54, -4.45]), male 18-29y (B= -19.70 [-30.07, -9.33]), and male 30-39y (B= -15.49 [-26.54, -4.45]) were associated with decreased PTSD symptomatology. Female sex was associated with decreased six-month functional outcome (Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended (GOSE): B= -0.6 [1.0, -0.1]). Comparatively, 30-39y scored higher on six-month nonverbal processing speed (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Processing Speed Index (WAIS-PSI); B= 11.88, 95% CI [1.66, 22.09]). Conclusions: Following mTBI, young adults aged 18-29y and 30-39y may have different risks for impairment. Sex may interact with age for PTSD symptomatology, with females 30-39y at highest risk. These results may be attributable to cortical maturation, biological response, social modifiers, and/or differential self-report. Confirmation in larger samples is needed; however, prevention and rehabilitation/counseling strategies after mTBI should likely be tailored for age and sex.
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