Authors

  1. Loke, Daniel PhD candidate
  2. Andelic, Nada MD, PhD
  3. Helseth, Eirik MD, PhD
  4. Vassend, Olav PhD
  5. Andersson, Stein PhD
  6. Ponsford, Jennie L. PhD
  7. Tverdal, Cathrine PhD
  8. Brunborg, Cathrine MSc
  9. Lovstad, Marianne PhD

Abstract

Objective: To explore factors associated with stability and change in fatigue from 6 to 12 months following traumatic brain injury (TBI).

 

Setting: Combined in- and outpatient acute care and postacute rehabilitation settings.

 

Participants: A total of 103 patients with confirmed intracranial injury were assessed 6 and/or 12 months following TBI.

 

Design: A prospective observational study with repeated measures at 2 time points, analyzed with a hybrid mixed-effects model.

 

Main Measures: Primary outcomes were the fatigue factor derived from items from several fatigue patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs; Fatigue Severity Scale, Chalder Fatigue Scale, Giessen Subjective Complaints List-fatigue subscale, and Rivermead Post-Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire-fatigue item) Secondary outcomes were PROMs relating to pain, somatic and psychological distress, insomnia, sleepiness, personality traits, optimism, resilience, behavioral activation and inhibition, and loneliness, as well as neuropsychological measures. Demographic variables and injury severity characteristics were included as covariates.

 

Results: In multilevel regression, female sex, years of education, and 3 factors related to injury severity, somatic vulnerability, and psychosocial robustness were all significantly associated with variation in fatigue between subjects, and explained 61% of the variance in fatigue that was due to stable between-subject differences. Fatigue levels declined significantly over time. Changes in pain severity, somatic symptom burden, psychological distress, and behavioral inhibition were positively associated with changes in fatigue, explaining 22% of the variance in fatigue within subjects.

 

Conclusions: The study demonstrated that several previously implicated factors show robust effects in distinguishing individuals with TBI on levels of fatigue, but only a few show additional within-subject associations across time. Pain severity, somatic symptom burden, psychological distress, and behavioral inhibition correlated with fatigue across time, implicating these factors as crucial targets for rehabilitation of patients with TBI who suffer from persistent fatigue.