Lifetime Traumatic Brain Injury and Cognitive Domain Deficits in Late Life: The PROTECT-TBI Cohort Study
Lennon, M; Brooker, H; Creese, B; et al.Aarsland, D; Thayanandan, T; Rigney, G; Hampshire, A; Ballard, C; Corbett, A; Raymont, V
Date: 27 January 2023
Article
Journal
Journal of Neurotrauma
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert
Publisher DOI
Abstract
TBI causes cognitive impairment but it remains contested which cognitive domains are most
affected. Further, moderate-severe TBI is known to be deleterious, but studies of mild TBI
(mTBI) show a greater mix of negative and positive findings . This study examines the longerterm cognitive effects of TBI severity and number of mild TBI ...
TBI causes cognitive impairment but it remains contested which cognitive domains are most
affected. Further, moderate-severe TBI is known to be deleterious, but studies of mild TBI
(mTBI) show a greater mix of negative and positive findings . This study examines the longerterm cognitive effects of TBI severity and number of mild TBI in later life. We examined a
subset (n=15,764) of the PROTECT study, a cohort assessing risk factors for cognitive decline
(ages between 50 and 90). Participants completed cognitive assessments annually for four
years. Cognitive tests were grouped using a Principal Components Analysis (PCA) into working
memory, episodic memory, attention, processing speed and executive function. Lifetime TBI
severity and number were retrospectively recalled by participants using the Brain Injury
Screening Questionnaire (BISQ). Linear Mixed Models examined the effect of severity of head
injury (non-TBI head strike, mild TBI (mTBI) and moderate-severe TBI) and number of mTBI at
baseline and over time. mTBI was considered as a continuous and categorical variable
(groups: 0 mTBI, 1 mTBI, 2 mTBIs, 3 mTBIs and 4+ mTBIs). Of the participants 5,725 (36.3%)
reported at least one mild TBI and 510 (3.2%) at least one moderate-severe TBI, while 3,711
(23.5%) had suffered at worst a non-TBI head strike and 5,818 (32.9%) reported no head
injuries. The participants had suffered their last reported head injury an average (SD) of 29.6
(20.0) years prior to the study. Regarding outcomes, there was no worsening in longitudinal
cognitive trajectories over the study duration but at baseline there were significant cognitive
deficits associated with TBI. At baseline, compared to those without head injury, individuals
reporting at least one moderate-severe TBI had significantly poorer attention (B=-0.163,
p<0.001), executive scores (B=-0.151, p=0.004) and processing speed (B=-0.075, p=0.033).
Those who had suffered at least a single mTBI also demonstrated significantly poorer
attention scores at baseline compared to the no head injury group (B=-0.052, p=0.001).
Compared to those with no mTBI, those in the 3 mTBI group manifested poorer baseline
executive function (B=-0.149, p=0.025) and attention scores (B=-0.085, p=0.015). At baseline,
those who had suffered 4 or more mild TBIs demonstrated poorer attention (B=-0.135,
p<0.001), processing speed (B=-0.072, p=0.009) and working memory (B=-0.052, p=0.036),
compared to those reporting no mTBI. TBI is associated with fixed, dose, and severitydependent cognitive deficits. The most sensitive cognitive domains are attention and
executive function, with approximately double the effect compared to processing speed and
working memory. Post-TBI cognitive rehabilitation should be targeted appropriately to
domain-specific effects. Significant long-term cognitive deficits were associated with 3
lifetime mTBI, a critical consideration when counselling individuals post-TBI about continuing
high-risk activities.
Clinical and Biomedical Sciences
Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2023, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. This version is made available under the CC-BY 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/