The Scandinavian Guidelines for Initial Management of Minimal, Mild, and Moderate Head Injuries in Adults (Scandinavian guidelines) are the first to incorporate serum measurement of the S100 astroglial calcium-binding protein… Click to show full abstract
The Scandinavian Guidelines for Initial Management of Minimal, Mild, and Moderate Head Injuries in Adults (Scandinavian guidelines) are the first to incorporate serum measurement of the S100 astroglial calcium-binding protein B (S100B) to emergency department (ED) triage of patients with head injury (HI). This prospective validation study was conducted in the ED of the Tampere University Hospital, Finland, between November 2015 to November 2016. All consecutive adult patients with HI presenting to the ED within 24 hours from injury were eligible for inclusion. Venous blood for S100B sampling was drawn from all patients and the result was available at the ED. Head CTs were performed according to the on-call physician's evaluation. Only the samples collected within 6 hours after injury were used. A one-week follow-up was conducted to identify possible HI-related complications. A total of 295 patients (median age=67.0 years, range=18-100; women=48.8%) were enrolled. Of those, 196 (66.4%) were scanned. Acute traumatic lesions were detected on 31 (15.8%) of the scans. Two of the CT-positive patients were scanned without a guidelines-based indication. These lesions did not require any specific treatment or repeated imaging. The guidelines-based sensitivity was 0.94 (95% CI=0.77-0.99) and specificity 0.19 (95% CI=0.13-0.26) for predicting traumatic intracranial CT abnormalities. The positive and negative predictive value for positive head CT was 0.18 (95% CI=0.12-0.25) and 0.94 (95% CI=0.78-0.99), respectively. In the mild-low risk group, no false negative S100B values were recorded. Thirteen patients (4.4%) were re-admitted to the ED and 2 patients (0.7%) died one week after the primary HI. The deaths were unrelated to the injury. None of these adverse events were directly caused by a primarily undiagnosed intracranial injury. The Scandinavian guidelines incorporated with S100B are a valid means of screening clinically significant acute traumatic lesions following HI and have the potential to reduce unnecessary CT scanning.
               
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