Epidemiology of Traumatic Brain Injury

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Introduction[edit | edit source]

The epidemiological data allows to draw preventive strategies by identifying the main causes for traumatic brain injury, factors contributing to severity, most prevalent age groups and other demographic of the risk groups. 

Understanding both the incidence and severity, in conjunction with identification of mechanism of injury allow us to design health care services from subacute and emergency medicine to neurorehabilitation in order to determine the training needs of the health care workforce. It also allows us to estimate future socioeconomic needs to minimise the burden on wider society and governments. 

Worldwide[edit | edit source]

It has been estimated that traumatic brain injury affects over 54 to 60 million people annually leading to either hospitalisation or mortality. Of all types of injury, those to the brain are among the most likely to result in death or permanent disability. [1]

According to the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016 [2] there were 27.08 million new cases of traumatic brain injury, with age-standardized incidence rates of 369 per 100 000 population, per year. 

Incidence Prevalence
2016 Counts  2016 Age-Standardised

Rates (per 100000)

Percentage Change in

Age-Standardised

Rates, 1990 - 2016

2016 Counts 2016 Age-Standardised

Rates (per 100000)

Percentage Change in

Age-Standardised rRtes,

1990 - 2016

Global 27,082033

(24,302091 to 30,298710)

369

(331 to 412)

3·6

(1·8 to 5·5)

55,495674

(53,400547 to 57,626214)

759

(731 to 788)

8·4

(7·7 to 9·2)

To access detailed incidence and prevalence of traumatic brain injury in 2016 by continent and country you can access the Global Burden of Traumatic Brain Injury and Spinal Cord Injury Study 2016 here.

The primary causes of traumatic brain injury vary by age, socioeconomic factors, and geographic region, so any planned interventions must take into account this variability. The low and medium-income countries (LMICs) experience nearly three times more cases of traumatic brain injury proportionally than high income countries (HICs), with Southeast Asian and Western Pacific regions experiencing the greatest overall burden of disease. [3]

Age related traumatic brain injury differences demonstrate three main age groups with highest prevalence:

  1. Early Childhood with falls being main cause
  2. Late Adolescence / Early Adulthood with RTAs being main cause
  3. Elderly with falls being the main cause.

Childhood injuries happen most likely in poorest countries with WHO claiming 98% occurrence in LMIC and 5 times greater frequency in industrialised nations. [1] In the last 20 years we have been observing increased incidence of falls amongst elderly. Gender differences also show a global trend with males being more prevalent with rates from 1.5:1 to 2.5:1 across the worldapart from the 8th and 9th decade of life.

In recent research, falls have been identified as the main cause of traumatic brain injury (attributable traumas increased from 43% to 54% between 2003 and 2012), followed by road traffic accidents (attributable traumas dropped from 39% in 2003 to 24% in 2012) [4], violence, sport related injuries and work-related injuries. 

The dominant cause of traumatic brain injury can vary depending on the countries’ income, geographical region and political circumstances, i.e.: conflict areas. The proportion of traumatic brain injury resulting from road traffic collisions is greatest in Africa and Southeast Asia (both 56%) and lowest in North America (25%), while South America, the Caribbean and Sub Saharan Africa represent the highest world incidence of traumatic brain injury related to violence.

There is some discrepancy with rural and urban traumatic brain injury incidence, respectively being 9.7 and 6.3 per 100 000 population following China based studies, and 172.1 and 97.8 per 100,000 following USA based studies. [1]

Brain injury is the leading cause of death and disability worldwide, with traumatic brain injury being the leading cause of seizure disorders. However, in recent years we have observed a decrease in mortality post traumatic brain injury.

The Case Fatality Rate (CFR) is determined by severity of traumatic brain injury and age and is as follows: 

  • General CFR ranges from 0.9 to 7.6 per 100 traumatic brain injury patients
  • CFR of severe traumatic brain injury ranges from 29 to 55 per 100 traumatic brain injury patients
  • Average mortality is 10.53 per 100 000 population per year, with 68% of the individuals with ranges from dying before reaching hospital.

There is a close link between traumatic brain injury and alcohol consumption. In the UK the incidence of head injury in acutely intoxicated patients is estimated to be as high as 65%. In Asia, a substantial amount of night time RTAs in Asia are alcohol related (10-30% depending on country). [1] Alcohol intoxication imposes serious diagnostic difficulties post traumatic brain injury.

It is estimated that 80% of individuals living with traumatic brain injury related impairment live in LMIC, but at the same time in those regions only 2% of them have access to rehabilitation services enabling their quality of life to increase. Higher income countries have been successfully decreasing the numbers of both overall traumatic brain injury and traumatic brain injury-related impairments following implementation of preventive measures, more rigorous safety measures, legislative changes, educating general population, improved emergency and neurotrauma services, and the implementation of evidence based guidelines in treating survivors of traumatic brain injury.

United States[edit | edit source]

Annually two million Americans are treated and released from hospital emergency departments as a result of traumatic brain injury. An estimated 56,000 individuals die as a result of a traumatic brain injury, whilst 80,000 individuals are estimated to be discharged from the hospital with some traumatic brain injury-related impairment and need assistance with activities of daily living. An estimated 5.3 million Americans are living today with impairment related to traumatic brain injury costing the country more than $56 billion per year considering care cost and loss of earnings.

Most studies indicate that males are far more likely to incur a traumatic brain injury than females. The highest rate of traumatic brain injury occurs between the ages of 15 - 24 years, with persons under the age of 5 or over the age of 75 at significantly higher risk. Between 20 - 30% of older people who fall, suffer moderate to severe injuries including bruising, hip fractures, or head trauma.

Veterans are a vastly growing population of traumatic brain injury survivors in the United States, with 350,000 troops identified with traumatic brain injury by the Department of Defense between 2000 and 2017 as a result of the Global War on Terror (GWOT). [5] The nature of current combat has seen an increased incidence of blast related traumatic brain injury, with an estimated 15% of all actively serving troops in Iraq and Afghanistan sustaining a traumatic brain injury, recognizing that this number may be underestimated due to reporting and data collection limitations. Improved armour and emergency medicine protocols has allowed greater rates of survival. The full extent of traumatic brain injury related burden is not fully acknowledged due to the longitudinal nature of the problem with cumulative injury effect, overlap of symptoms with PTSD, with peak socioeconomic problems occurring up to 30 - 40 years post conflict. 

Europe[edit | edit source]

In the European Union, brain injury accounts for 1.5 million hospital admissions per year and 57,000 deaths. The incidence is at 287 per 100,000 with fatality of 15 per 100 000, with some countries, like the UK, reporting significantly higher incidence at 453 per 100 000 of which 10.9% are considered moderate to severe. The difference in the incidence is related to the data collection methodology, not factual difference of incidence. [6] The most prevalent group include male urban residents and children, with the most common cause being RTIs, peaked at late afternoon and early evening. [1]

The leading causes of traumatic brain injury vary by age: falls are the leading cause of traumatic brain injury among persons aged 65 years and older; transportation is the leading cause of traumatic brain injury among persons under the age of 65 years. Motor vehicle crashes including motorcycles, bicycles, and pedestrians account for 50% of all traumatic brain injury. According to Peeters at al [7] epidemiological analysis, Scandinavian countries report more falls related traumatic brain injury. Estimates suggest that sports related brain injury accounts for close to 300,000 injuries each year,with winter sports such as skiing and ice-skating accounting for close to 20,000 brain injuries

Latin America and Caribbean [edit | edit source]

The epidemiology of traumatic brain injury in Latin America and the Caribbean is dictated heavily by socioeconomic status with RTIs and violence being the main causes, with violence related traumatic brain injury being a principal cause of TBIs-related deaths. The incidence is much higher and approximately at 360 per 100 000 of population per year. The most at risk are male (83%) and the age group of higher incidence is of young adults.

Asia[edit | edit source]

The transition we are witnessing amongst Low and Middle-Income Countries create new and multiple risks of traumatic brain injury including increased motorisation and urbanisation, along with increasing number of non-communicable diseases. Therefore, the trend for increasing number of traumatic brain injury and resultant disability is observed similarly to High Income Countries. [8] Along with the insufficient health care and poor preventive strategies the socioeconomic burden of traumatic brain injury has been increasing.

According to GBD 2016 [2] the incidence of RTIs, falls and violence related traumatic brain injury have been increasing sharply with India, China and Other Asian countries having the greatest incidence. Compared to other world regions, Asia has a different distribution of contributing causes with falls contributing to 77% of all traumatic brain injury and only 3% of traumatic brain injury resulting from war. However, caution needs to be applied to the data due to inefficient data collection mechanisms and definition and assessment protocols discrepancies. 

Asian males from LMIC are more prevalent to sustain traumatic brain injury due to greater exposure to risk factors. According to Raja [9], in Lahore Region 75% traumatic brain injury related admissions are of male patients. Similar gender differences have been observed in Singapore and China, with 75% casualties with severe traumatic brain injury being male.

In relation to the age, Asian data demonstrates similar pattern to other regions with children under 11 being at greater risks of traumatic brain injury, with over 50% injuries in 4-6 years old being related to falls, with a greater prevalence in boys.

Traumatic brain injury is a leading cause of mortality, morbidity and socioeconomic loss in India. India has been experiencing a much higher incidence of fall related traumatic brain injury with fractured skull and intracranial long-term injuries in comparison to other countries, with the incidence rate amongst Indian males of 50.3 per 100 000 population, in comparison with the global average of 13. 3 per 100 000. 

According to Pauvanachandra and Hyder [8], in India approximately one million individuals requires rehabilitation as a result of traumatic brain injury consequences at any given time. In China, traumatic brain injury is a leading traumatic injury cause and 5th leading cause of death in younger adults. RTAs account for 61% of traumatic brain injury with one-third of those motorcyclists, 31% pedestrians and only 14% of car users.

Middle Eastern and other Asian Regions do not have consistent data collection process, but some local studies are emerging e.g. in Yemen traumatic brain injury prevalence rate at the level of 210 per 100 000 population, with domestic violence and falls being the leading causes, followed closely by RTAs.  

References[edit | edit source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Hyder AA, Wunderlich CA, Puvanachandra P, Gururaj G, Kobusingye OC. The impact of traumatic brain injuries: a global perspective. NeuroRehabilitation. 2007;22(5):341-53.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Global Burden of Disease Study 2016. Traumatic Brain Injury and Spinal Cord Injury Collaborators. Global, regional, and national burden of traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury, 1990–2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016. The Lancet Neurology. 26 Nov 2018. doi:10.1016/S1474-4422(18)30415-0
  3. Dewan MC, Rattani A, Gupta S, Baticulon RE, Hung YC, Punchak M, Agrawal A, Adeleye AO, Shrime MG, Rubiano AM, Rosenfeld JV, Park KB. Estimating the global incidence of traumatic brain injury. Journal of Neurosurgery. 2018 Apr 1:1-18. doi: 10.3171/2017.10. JNS17352
  4. Laccarino C, Carretta A, Nicolosi F, Morselli C. Epidemiology of severe traumatic brain injury. Journal of Neurosurgical Science. 2018 Oct;62(5):535-541. doi: 10.23736/S0390-5616.18.04532-0
  5. Lindquist LK, Love HC, Elbogen EB. Traumatic Brain Injury in Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans: New Results from a National Random Sample Study. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neuroscience 2017; 29(3): 254–259. Published online 2017 Jan 25. doi: 10.1176/appi.neuropsych.16050100
  6. Maas AIR, Menon DK, Adelson PD, Andelic N, Bell MJ, Belli A, at al. Traumatic brain injury: integrated approaches to improve prevention, clinical care, and research. The Lancet Neurology. 2017 Dec;16(12):987-1048. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(17)30371-X.
  7. Peeters W, van den Brande R, Polinder S, Brazinova A, Ewout W, Steyerberg EW, Lingsma HF, Maas AI. Epidemiology of traumatic brain injury in Europe. Acta Neurochirurgica. 2015;157:1683–1696 DOI 10.1007/s00701-015-2512-7
  8. 8.0 8.1 Puvanachandra P, Hyder AA. The burden of traumatic brain injury in Asia: a call for research. Pakistan Journal of Neurological Science. 2009; 4(1): 27-32.
  9. Raja IA, Vohra AH, Ahmed M. Neurotrauma in Pakistan. World Journal of Surgery. 2001 Sep;25(9):1230-7.