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Clinical Trials/NCT02646176
NCT02646176
Completed
Not Applicable

Comparative Effectiveness of Rehabilitation Interventions for Traumatic Brain Injury

Jennifer Bogner, PhD, ABPP0 sites2,130 target enrollmentOctober 2008
ConditionsBrain Injuries

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Brain Injuries
Sponsor
Jennifer Bogner, PhD, ABPP
Enrollment
2130
Primary Endpoint
Participation
Status
Completed
Last Updated
4 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is increasingly recognized as a significant public health issue, but the most effective rehabilitation methods have yet to be identified. The Institute of Medicine and the Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research sponsored systematic reviews of evidence for comparative effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions for TBI. Both reviews concluded that substantially more research is needed to identify interventions best suited for different individuals. The practice-based evidence (PBE) approach employed to create the data used in the proposed study was a research method recommended to provide greater clarity, along with use of patient-centered outcomes obtained over a longer period of time than used in previous studies.

The following specific aims will be addressed in the proposed study:

  1. Determine the comparative effectiveness of different therapeutic approaches used in inpatient TBI rehabilitation after statistically adjusting for patient need and ability to benefit from various approaches.

    Investigators hypothesize:

    1.1. Patients who receive a greater proportion of therapy time in Advanced Training (versus Standard of Care) will achieve better outcomes than similar patients who receive a lesser proportion of treatment time in Advanced Training.

    1.2. Patients with the greatest initial levels of disability will experience larger effects from Advanced Training therapeutic approaches in comparison to the effects experienced by patients with less disability at admission.

    1.3. Patients who receive a greater proportion of therapy in contextualized treatment (versus decontextualized) will achieve better outcomes than similar patients who receive a lesser proportion of time in contextualized treatment.

  2. Determine the comparative effectiveness of difference in the delivery of inpatient rehabilitation therapies, after statistically adjusting for patient need and ability to benefit.

Investigators hypothesize:

2.1 The level of effort that patients are able to apply in treatment moderates the effectiveness of time in treatment.

2.2 Family involvement in treatment is associated with better outcomes.

Data will be drawn from the database established for the TBI Practice-Based Evidence Study (TBI-PBE Study). Data on 2130 persons who received inpatient TBI rehabilitation at any of 10 sites (9 in US, 1 in Canada) were obtained for the study. Detailed longitudinal data were collected prospectively on rehabilitation therapies (with point of care data completed for every clinical encounter), course of recovery, person and injury characteristics and outcomes during and after rehabilitation. Advanced analytic methods (e.g. propensity scores, generalized linear mixed models) will be used to compare the effects of different rehabilitation interventions on outcomes at discharge and during the 9 months following rehabilitation.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
October 2008
End Date
October 2012
Last Updated
4 years ago
Study Type
Observational
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Jennifer Bogner, PhD, ABPP
Responsible Party
Sponsor Investigator
Principal Investigator

Jennifer Bogner, PhD, ABPP

Professor

Ohio State University

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Sustained a TBI, defined as damage to brain tissue caused by external force and evidenced by loss of consciousness, post-traumatic amnesia, skull fracture, or objective neurological findings
  • Diagnosed with an International Classification of Diseases (ICD-9-CM) code consistent with the CDC Guidelines for Surveillance of Central Nervous System Injury
  • Receiving inpatient care on a designated brain injury rehabilitation unit of one of the participating rehabilitation facilities
  • Incurred a TBI severe enough to warrant inpatient rehabilitation regardless of other injuries, with TBI being the predominant reason for rehabilitation admission

Exclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Participation

Time Frame: 3 months post-discharge from inpatient rehabilitation

Participation as measured by the Participation Assessment with Recombined Tools-Objective

Secondary Outcomes

  • Life satisfaction(9 months post-discharge from inpatient rehabilitation)
  • Depressive symptoms(9 months post-discharge from inpatient rehabilitation)
  • Functional independence-Motor(9 months post-discharge from inpatient rehabilitation)
  • Participation(3 months post-discharge)
  • Functional independence-Cognitive(9 months after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation)

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