Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Prescribed Light Exercise to Standard Management for Emergency Department Patients With Acute Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.
Introduction: Current guidelines for treating patients with mild traumatic brain injury
(MTBI) recommend a period of cognitive rest and gradual return to usual activities with
avoidance of any activity that exacerbates symptoms. However, recent studies have reported
prolonged rest beyond 48 hours might hinder MTBI recovery, and there is limited evidence to
suggest following guidelines has a positive impact on prognosis. Given the paucity of
effective management strategies to prevent post-concussion syndrome (PCS) and emerging
evidence of the benefits of exercise in MTBI patients, there is an urgent need for more
research on the effectiveness of an early exercise intervention in the acute MTBI patient
population as prevention of PCS.
Research Question: Among adult (18-64 years) patients presenting to the ED with a discharge
diagnosis of acute MTBI (defined by the Zurich consensus statement), does prescribing light
exercise (ie: 30 min daily walking) reduce the proportion of patients with PCS at 30 days,
compared to standard discharge instructions?
Methods: This will be a randomized controlled trial of adult (18-64 years) patients
discharged from an academic ED diagnosed with MTBI occurring within 48 hours of the index ED
visit. The intervention group will receive discharge instructions prescribing 30 minutes of
light exercise (ie: walking) and the control group will be instructed to gradually return to
activities. Discharge instructions will be read by the attending physician or ED nurse.
Patients will be provided a printed copy of the discharge instructions. Depending on their
preferences, patients will be contacted by email or by telephone to complete the Rivermead
Post-Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire (RPQ), a validated, 16 item questionnaire.
The primary outcome of this study will be the proportion of patients with PCS at 30 days,
defined as an increase from baseline of ≥ 3 symptoms on the validated RPQ at 1 month.
Secondary outcomes will include change in RPQ from baseline to 72 hours, 7 days, 14 days, 30
days post initial ED visit, number of missed days of school or work and repeat visits to a
healthcare provider. To assess compliance with ED discharge instructions, patients will be
asked to complete a daily activity journal and will be given fitness tracking devices.
Introduction:The emergency department (ED) is the first point of health care contact for most
head injured patients. The majority (estimated 85%) of patients suffering head injury will
not have intra-cranial damage requiring neurosurgical consultation, but may have symptoms of
mil traumatic brain injury (MTBI). Patients with MTBI may have physical, emotional,
behavioral, or cognitive symptoms such as headache, sleep disturbance, disorders of balance,
fatigue, irritability, memory and concentration problems, and the majority have self-limited
symptoms that abate within 7 to 10 days. Although early and spontaneous resolution occurs in
most patients, a small proportion of adults with MTBI will have a protracted course. It is
estimated between 15-30% of patients with MTBI develop post-concussion syndrome (PCS), which
is a persistence of head injury symptoms after MTBI.3 PCS usually lasts 2-4 months, and the
symptoms typically peak 4-6 weeks following the injury4. However, in a smaller percentage of
patients, the symptoms of PCS last for a year or longer. Approximately 20% of adults with PCS
will not have returned to full-time work 1 year after the initial injury, and some are
disabled permanently by PCS.
Current guidelines recommend a period of `cognitive rest' and stepwise return to usual
activities following MTBI. Cognitive rest is defined as the avoidance of mental activities
that may trigger symptoms, such as watching television, using the computer, exercising, or
talking on the phone. Patients following `return to usual activity' instructions are
encouraged to only resume normal activities once symptoms have resolved, and if symptoms
return upon recommencement of activities, to return to rest. However, a recent systematic
review of early educational interventions in the ED for MTBI concluded there are no clear and
consistent interventions or standard management practices that exist for this population.
Additionally, previous research evaluating a period of strict bed rest, which includes both
physical and cognitive rest, has also not been shown to decrease severity or duration of MTBI
symptoms. Based on the best available evidence, current guidelines for the management of MTBI
suggest complete bed rest should be avoided after the first 48 hours post-injury.
Regular exercise has been shown to have positive effects on well-being, including mental
health, improved self esteem, sleep and memory. Recent studies including patients with PCS
have reported exercise treatment programs improved exercise tolerance and decreased symptoms,
even for those patients where exercise previously exacerbated PCS symptoms. Additionally,
Wise et al., randomized patients with severe TBI to either a structured exercise program for
10 weeks or usual care and found patients in the exercise group were less depressed and
reported better health status compared to those not included in the exercise program.
Rationale: Given the paucity of effective management strategies that prevent PCS following
MTBI and emerging evidence of the benefits of exercise in MTBI patients, there is an urgent
need for more research on the effectiveness of an early exercise intervention in the acute
MTBI patient population as prevention of PCS.
Research Question: Among adult (18-64 years) patients presenting to the ED with a discharge
diagnosis of acute MTBI (defined by the Zurich consensus statement), does prescribing light
exercise (ie: 30 min daily walking) reduce the proportion of patients with PCS at 30 days,
compared to standard discharge instructions?
Methods:
Study Design and Population This randomized controlled trial will be conducted in the ED of
an academic tertiary care hospital (annual census 60,000). Consecutive, adult (18-64 years)
patients presenting to the ED with a MTBI sustained within the preceding 48 hours will be
eligible for enrollment. Acute MTBI will be defined by the Zurich consensus statement as a
direct blow to the head, face, neck or elsewhere on the body with a force transmitted to the
head which may or may not involve loss of consciousness AND results in brain injury with 1 or
more symptoms in 1 or more of the following clinical domains: somatic, cognitive, emotional
or behavioral, or sleep.
Triage nurses will screen potential patients and once eligibility is confirmed by the
attending physician, informed written consent will be obtained from trained research
personnel (when available) or by the attending physician or nurse. The study protocol will be
approved by the local institutional Research Ethics Board and registered with
clinicaltrials.gov.
Trained research personnel will collect demographic and clinical parameters (history,
physical examination findings, diagnostic testing, ED management) from paper and electronic
charts using a standardized data collection tool. The research assistant will ask patients to
complete an inventory of symptoms to establish a baseline using the Rivermead Post-Concussion
Symptoms Questionnaire (RPQ), a validated, 16 item questionnaire and provide instructions to
the patient regarding the wearable step counter.
Interventions After providing informed written consent, patients will be randomized to either
discharge instructions prescribing 30 minutes of light exercise (ie: walking) daily
(intervention) or discharge instructions describing graduated return to usual activities and
cognitive rest (control) using a fixed 1:1 allocation ratio produced by a computer-based
random number generator. Block sizes of four will be used to ensure equal allocation to each
group. To avoid potential patient selection and allocation bias, all physicians, nurses, RAs
and patients will be blinded to the randomization schedule.
Sealed, sequentially numbered, opaque envelopes will contain the pre-assigned group
allocation. By necessity, the physician administering the instructions and the patient will
be aware of their allocation. However, outcome assessors will be blinded to group assignment.
Prior to receiving the discharge instructions, all patients will complete the RPQ
questionnaire. Patients will be contacted via telephone at 2, 4 and 6 weeks following their
index ED visit to repeat the RPQ questionnaire and determine if they have any subsequent
MTBI-related physician visits and how many days of work or school they have missed due to
MTBI symptoms. If telephone contact is not successful on the first day of scheduled
follow-up, participants will be sent a text message to remind them of the scheduled telephone
interview. If contact is not made within this timeframe, patients will be considered lost to
follow-up and their data will be excluded from further analysis.
Discharge instructions will be read by the attending physician or ED nurse. Patients will be
provided a printed copy of the discharge instructions. All patients will receive instructions
including a description of common symptoms following MTBI and warning signs for missed
intracranial injury such as vomiting, stupor, focal weakness, seizure and severe headache.
The control group discharge instructions have been adapted from the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention Acute Concussion Evaluation Care Plan (work version) for healthcare
providers. These MTBI discharge instructions describe a graduated return to usual activities
plan based on head injury symptoms and emphasized cognitive rest. The intervention group will
receive discharge instructions prescribing 30 minutes of light exercise (ie: walking) and the
control group will be instructed to gradually return to activities.
Outcome Measures The primary outcome of this study will be the proportion of patients with
PCS at 30 days, defined as an increase from baseline of ≥ 3 symptoms on the validated RPQ at
1 month. Secondary outcomes will include change in RPQ from baseline to 72 hours, 7 days, 14
days, 30 days post initial ED visit, number of missed days of school or work and repeat
visits to a healthcare provider. To assess compliance with ED discharge instructions,
patients will be asked to complete a daily activity journal and will be given step counters.
Data Analyses Data will be entered directly into a study specific Microsoft Excel database
(Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, Washington). Descriptive statistics will be summarized using
means with standard deviations (SD), medians with interquartile ranges (IQR) or frequencies
with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) where appropriate. Differences in RPQ at 72 hours, 7
days, 14 days, 30 days post ED visit between the intervention and control groups will be
compared using paired samples t-tests. Other outcomes including included change in number of
missed days of school or work, repeat visits to a healthcare provider, and quality of life
indicators will be compared between groups using descriptive statistics with 95% confidence
intervals where appropriate. Analyses will be conducted according to the intention-to-treat
principle.
Additionally, the tracking devices' measurements will be compared to the patients' reported
symptoms and reported daily activity. All statistical analyses will be conducted using SAS
(v.9.4, SAS institute, Inc., Cary, NC, USA).
;
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