Abstract
Objective: To examine the comparative efficacy of 3 common measures of traumatic brain injury (TBI) severity for predicting inpatient outcomes upon hospital discharge.
Setting: Acute brain injury rehabilitation unit at level 1 trauma center.
Participants: 100 patients with TBI.
Design: Retrospective analysis of injury severity, demographic, and outcome data.
Main Measures: Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) at admission, time to follow commands (TTC), duration of posttraumatic amnesia (PTA), and Functional Independence Measure at hospital discharge.
Results: A hierarchal multiple regression revealed that duration of PTA was a significant and powerful unique predictor of Functional Independence Measure scores at discharge ([beta] = -0.46, P = .001), while TTC ([beta] = 0.26, P = .056) and GCS ([beta] = 0.16, P = .143) were not. These effects were present even after controlling for age, gender, educational level, racial/ethnic minority status, cause of injury, history of substance abuse, and neurosurgical intervention.
Conclusion: Although clinicians often use GCS scores and TTC when assessing acute TBI severity and during treatment formulation, this study provides evidence that duration of PTA may be a more meaningful predictor of patients' functional levels at discharge.