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The clinical condition of severe cognitive-motor impairment of Disorders of Consciousness (DoC; e.g., Vegetative State - VS, and Minimal Consciousness State - MCS), is characterized by a high risk of developing clinical complications. In this study, the investigators propose a new Clinical Complications Scale (CCS) developed to assess the impact of clinical complications on the long-term evolution of a cohort of patients with DoC.
This is a multi-site prospective observational study conducted in patients with Severe Acquired Brain Injury and DoC admitted to six centers of Fondazione Don Gnocchi (Italy), with clinical data collection not deviating from routine practice (except for CCS administration). The study is non-commercial and will have a maximum total duration of 24 months. It is planned to assess inter-rater agreement and concurrent validity with a similar instrument (CoCoS scale).
Full description
Validation of a scale for the assessment of clinical complications (Clinical Complications Scale, CCS) on a sample of DoC patients with:
This study will be implemented throutgh three phases:
(i) Identification of a group of evaluators at participating centers (n=3 per center; total n=18) and training them to administer the CCS and CoCos scales by group videoconference; (ii) Recruitment of a sample of DoC patients (n=7 per center; total n=42) who will each undergo assessment with CCS (administered twice by two independent assessors, A and B) and with CoCoS (administered by a third independent assessor, C); (iii) Evaluation of the degree of agreement between observers in administering the CCS scale (agreement between evaluators A and B) and evaluation of concurrent validity between CCS and CoCoS scale (agreement between evaluators A/B and C).
The study involves the collection of the following clinical data for each patient on admission and during the following 15 days:
The CCS provides a record of clinical complications in 11 categories corresponding to systems of the body (metabolic abnormalities, disorders-cardiovascular, skin and musculoskeletal problems, gastrointestinal disorders, genito-urinary disorders, respiratory disorders) or categories of clinical problems frequently encountered in the population of patients with DoC (neurosurgical complications, epilepsy and myoclonus, paraosteortropathy, neurovegetative crisis, sepsis; Estraneo et al., 2018). For each category, the severity of complications is graded from 0 (absent complication) to 3 (severe complication) based on the intensity of the therapeutic intervention required, interference with the clinic, and/or frequency and duration of morbid events (an exception is the "sepsis" category for which only presence/absence is recorded). In the case of multiple clinical complications occurring within the same category, the most severe will be considered for the severity score. In this way, a cumulative scale score with range 0-31 can be derived.
Descriptive data from the sample at study entry will be expressed in terms of mean and standard deviation for quantitative variables and as frequencies for nominal variables. For the assessment of inter-rater agreement in the administration of the CCS, Fleiss' weighted K-index will be calculated on the individual subscale scores and the total score of the scale administered to each patient by two different operators. For concurrent validity testing between the CCS and CoCoS scales, Fleiss' weighted K-index will be calculated between the scores at the subscales in common between the two instruments, while Spearman's correlation coefficient for ranks will be calculated on the total scores obtained by patients on the two scales.
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42 participants in 1 patient group
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Anna Estraneo, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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