Background: The World Health Organization has identified an unmet global need for rehabilitation interventions concerning 20 non-communicable diseases, traumatic brain injury included. This overview compiles and synthesizes the quality and quantity of available evidence on the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions for traumatic brain injury from Cochrane systematic reviews (CSRs). The results will be used to develop the Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation. Methods: All CSRs on TBI tagged in the Cochrane Rehabilitation database published between August 2009 and September 2021 were included. Evidence mapping was implemented to extract study characteristics and evidence from the CSRs. Results: Six CSRs (42 studies; n = 3983) examined the effectiveness of either non-pharmacological or pharmacological interventions after TBI. Among 19 comparisons, 3% were rated as high in quality of evidence, 9% moderate, 54% low, and 34% very low. Non-pharmacological interventions with moderate quality, hospital-based cognitive rehabilitation and cognitive didactic therapy, likely produced minimal to no changes in the return-to-work rate. Anti-epileptic drugs and neuroprotective agents resulted in a minimal difference to the frequency of late seizure episodes in post-traumatic epilepsy. Conclusions: No prominent advances in treatment options were reported in any of the CSRs. The high rate of low and very low quality of evidence makes it difficult to ascertain the effectiveness of several recommended non-pharmacological interventions.

Overview of Cochrane Systematic Reviews of Rehabilitation Interventions for Persons with Traumatic Brain Injury: A Mapping Synthesis / V.M. Young, J.R. Hill, M. Patrini, S. Negrini, C. Arienti. - In: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE. - ISSN 2077-0383. - 11:10(2022 May 10), pp. 2691.1-2691.17. [10.3390/jcm11102691]

Overview of Cochrane Systematic Reviews of Rehabilitation Interventions for Persons with Traumatic Brain Injury: A Mapping Synthesis

S. Negrini
Penultimo
;
2022

Abstract

Background: The World Health Organization has identified an unmet global need for rehabilitation interventions concerning 20 non-communicable diseases, traumatic brain injury included. This overview compiles and synthesizes the quality and quantity of available evidence on the effectiveness of rehabilitation interventions for traumatic brain injury from Cochrane systematic reviews (CSRs). The results will be used to develop the Package of Interventions for Rehabilitation. Methods: All CSRs on TBI tagged in the Cochrane Rehabilitation database published between August 2009 and September 2021 were included. Evidence mapping was implemented to extract study characteristics and evidence from the CSRs. Results: Six CSRs (42 studies; n = 3983) examined the effectiveness of either non-pharmacological or pharmacological interventions after TBI. Among 19 comparisons, 3% were rated as high in quality of evidence, 9% moderate, 54% low, and 34% very low. Non-pharmacological interventions with moderate quality, hospital-based cognitive rehabilitation and cognitive didactic therapy, likely produced minimal to no changes in the return-to-work rate. Anti-epileptic drugs and neuroprotective agents resulted in a minimal difference to the frequency of late seizure episodes in post-traumatic epilepsy. Conclusions: No prominent advances in treatment options were reported in any of the CSRs. The high rate of low and very low quality of evidence makes it difficult to ascertain the effectiveness of several recommended non-pharmacological interventions.
English
brain injuries; interventions; overview; rehabilitation; traumatic; treatment outcome;
Settore MED/34 - Medicina Fisica e Riabilitativa
Review essay
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 3: Good health and well-being
10-mag-2022
MDPI
11
10
2691
1
17
17
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
pubmed
wos
scopus
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Overview of Cochrane Systematic Reviews of Rehabilitation Interventions for Persons with Traumatic Brain Injury: A Mapping Synthesis / V.M. Young, J.R. Hill, M. Patrini, S. Negrini, C. Arienti. - In: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE. - ISSN 2077-0383. - 11:10(2022 May 10), pp. 2691.1-2691.17. [10.3390/jcm11102691]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
5
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
V.M. Young, J.R. Hill, M. Patrini, S. Negrini, C. Arienti
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Young_J Clin Med_Overview of CSR_TBI.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 538.96 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
538.96 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/953212
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 0
  • Scopus 2
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 3
social impact