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Biomarkers for Traumatic Brain Injury: Data Standards and Statistical Considerations
Brain and Spinal Injury Center, Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Department of Biomedical and Dental Sciences and Morphofunctional Imaging, University of Messina, Messina, Italy.
Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Orobix Srl, Bergamo, Italy.
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Number of Authors: 3802021 (English)In: Journal of Neurotrauma, ISSN 0897-7151, E-ISSN 1557-9042, Vol. 38, no 18, p. 2514-2529Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Recent biomarker innovations hold potential for transforming diagnosis, prognostic modeling, and precision therapeutic targeting of traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, many biomarkers, including brain imaging, genomics, and proteomics, involve vast quantities of high-throughput and high-content data. Management, curation, analysis, and evidence synthesis of these data are not trivial tasks. In this review, we discuss data management concepts and statistical and data sharing strategies when dealing with biomarker data in the context of TBI research. We propose that application of biomarkers involves three distinct steps-discovery, evaluation, and evidence synthesis. First, complex/big data has to be reduced to useful data elements at the stage of biomarker discovery. Second, inferential statistical approaches must be applied to these biomarker data elements for assessment of biomarker clinical utility and validity. Last, synthesis of relevant research is required to support practice guidelines and enable health decisions informed by the highest quality, up-to-date evidence available. We focus our discussion around recent experiences from the International Traumatic Brain Injury Research (InTBIR) initiative, with a specific focus on four major clinical projects (Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI, Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in TBI, Collaborative Research on Acute Traumatic Brain Injury in Intensive Care Medicine in Europe, and Approaches and Decisions in Acute Pediatric TBI Trial), which are currently enrolling subjects in North America and Europe. We discuss common data elements, data collection efforts, data-sharing opportunities, and challenges, as well as examine the statistical techniques required to realize successful adoption and use of biomarkers in the clinic as a foundation for precision medicine in TBI.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Mary Ann Liebert, 2021. Vol. 38, no 18, p. 2514-2529
Keywords [en]
Biomarkers, data sharing, traumatic brain injury
National Category
Biomedical Laboratory Science/Technology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-81119DOI: 10.1089/neu.2019.6762ISI: 000522970800001PubMedID: 32046588Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85115647552OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-81119DiVA, id: diva2:1423007
Available from: 2020-04-12 Created: 2020-04-12 Last updated: 2021-10-21Bibliographically approved

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