Comparison of different definitions of traumatic brain injury: implications for cohort characteristics and survival in women, Philadelphia, USA

Author:

D'Alonzo Bernadette AORCID,Bretzin Abigail CORCID,Schneider Andrea LCORCID,Morse Rebecca B,Canelón Silvia PORCID,Wiebe Douglas JORCID,Boland Mary ReginaORCID

Abstract

BackgroundTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is an acute injury that is understudied in civilian cohorts, especially among women, as TBI has historically been considered to be largely a condition of athletes and military service people. Both the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Department of Defense (DOD)/Veterans Affairs (VA) have developed case definitions to identify patients with TBI from medical records; however, their definitions differ. We sought to re-examine these definitions to construct an expansive and more inclusive definition among a cohort of women with TBI.MethodsIn this study, we use electronic health records (EHR) from a single healthcare system to study the impact of using different case definitions to identify patients with TBI. Specifically, we identified adult female patients with TBI using the CDC definition, DOD/VA definition and a combined and expanded definition herein called the Penn definition.ResultsWe identified 4446 adult-female TBI patients meeting the CDC definition, 3619 meeting the DOD/VA definition, and together, 6432 meeting our expanded Penn definition that includes the CDC ad DOD/VA definitions.ConclusionsUsing the expanded definition identified almost two times as many patients, enabling investigations to more fully characterise these patients and related outcomes. Our expanded TBI case definition is available to other researchers interested in employing EHRs to investigate TBI.

Funder

National Center for Injury Prevention and Control

Institutional Clinical and Translational Science Award

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

BMJ

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