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Developing and Validating Blood and Imaging BIOmarkers of AXonal Injury Following Traumatic Brain Injury (BIO-AX-TBI)

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Imperial College London

Status

Completed

Conditions

Traumatic Brain Injury

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Blood Sampling
Diagnostic Test: Microdialysis
Diagnostic Test: MRI (advanced)
Diagnostic Test: Neuropsychological tests
Diagnostic Test: MRI

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03534154
230221
MR/R004528/1 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Observational longitudinal study assessing outcomes following moderate-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Full description

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) occurs when the brain is physically damaged, for example after a car crash. It is common and survivors often have major on-going problems. It is very difficult to predict how patients will do after TBI. One reason for this is that clinicians and researchers are unable to measure all the effects of TBI. An important factor is that the connections between nerve cells are damaged by the impact on the brain of an injury (axonal injury). This damage has been difficult to measure in the past, but new ways to scan the brain and more sensitive ways of picking up the effects of this injury in the blood could change this. In other parts of medicine tests of this type have had a dramatic effect on how clinicians treat patients. For example, the products of heart muscle damage that have leaked into the blood can be used identify a heart attack and guide treatment. Clinicians need similar tests to be available in TBI. This should be possible as the products of axonal injury also leak into the blood and researchers have a sensitive way to pick this up. An accurate test for axonal injury would guide treatment choices and allow clinicians to predict how patients will recover. The investigators have brought together an international team who have been working on different aspects of this problem for many years. Together the investigators will conduct a large study to identify the best measures of axonal injury. The investigators will carefully test whether these measures help predict outcomes and will study where the blood markers come from using a safe method to measure the effects of axonal injury directly from the brain. The work links into some large projects that have already started and will use a standard way to assess patients after their injury. This is important because it will allow researchers to share results across studies. The investigators hope the work will allow us to identify a blood marker for TBI that could be widely used to quickly identify the presence of axonal injury. The investigators will also show what brain imaging measure is best at picking up axonal injury and how best to combine the measures to best predict how patients recover. This will allow doctors to diagnose problems after TBI more accurately, choose the right treatments and give patients and their families accurate advice about what will happen after discharge from hospital.

Enrollment

313 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • A diagnosis of moderate/severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) as classified using the Mayo classification system;
  • Healthy controls will be age-matched to our TBI patients and will not have a history of significant neurological or psychiatric conditions.

Exclusion criteria

  • Unwillingness or inability to follow the procedures required
  • Bilateral fixed dilated pupils
  • For MRI, contra-indication to MRI scanning, assessed by a standard pre-MRI questionnaire (e.g. presence of ferromagnetic implants in the body, claustrophobia, pregnancy) if considered for the imaging strand of the study.

Trial design

313 participants in 4 patient groups

TBI - MRI / bloods / cognitive / clinical outcomes
Description:
Work package 1. In a large multi-centre cohort of adult moderate/severe TBI patients we aim to identify the most informative plasma biomarker(s) of the severity of axonal injury. We will characterise their time course, focusing on neurofilament light (NFL) and tau, and relate these to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures of axonal injury. Using logistic regression we will then test whether these measures contribute to the prediction of clinical outcome at twelve months
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Neuropsychological tests
Diagnostic Test: MRI
Diagnostic Test: Blood Sampling
TBI - Advanced MRI / bloods / cognitive / clinical outcomes
Description:
Work package 2. In a subgroup of the patients recruited to WP1 we will use advanced MRI and longitudinal assessments to provide a more detailed description of the relationship between the plasma biomarkers and outcome after TBI. We will test whether advanced diffusion and myelin integrity measures correlate with plasma biomarkers and whether early plasma biomarker levels predict neurodegeneration measured by progressive atrophy after TBI.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Neuropsychological tests
Diagnostic Test: MRI
Diagnostic Test: Blood Sampling
Diagnostic Test: MRI (advanced)
TBI - microdialysis / adv. MRI / cognitive / clinical
Description:
Work package 3. In a second subgroup of patients recruited to WP1 we will combine microdialysis, neuroimaging and plasma sampling of axonal proteins to provide a deeper understanding of the mechanisms of axonal injury progression and use this approach to investigate the axonal origin of the plasma biomarkers.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Neuropsychological tests
Diagnostic Test: MRI
Diagnostic Test: Blood Sampling
Diagnostic Test: Microdialysis
Diagnostic Test: MRI (advanced)
Healthy volunteer
Description:
Single assessment using MRI, bloods and cognitive testing.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Neuropsychological tests
Diagnostic Test: MRI
Diagnostic Test: Blood Sampling

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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