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The BrainIT group: concept and core dataset definition

Piper, I ; Citerio, G ; Chambers, I ; Contant, C ; Enblad, P ; Fiddes, H ; Howells, T ; Kiening, K ; Nilsson, Petra LU and Yau, YH (2003) In Acta Neurochirurgica 145(8). p.615-629
Abstract
Introduction. An open collaborative international network has been established which aims to improve inter-centre standards for collection of high-resolution, neurointensive care data on patients with traumatic brain injury. The group is also working towards the creation of an open access, detailed and validated database that will be useful for post-hoc hypothesis testing. In Part A, the underlying concept, the group coordination structure, membership guidelines and database access and publication criteria are described. Secondly, in part B, we describe a set of meetings funded by the EEC that allowed us to define a "Core Dataset" and we present the results of a feasibility exercise for collection of this core dataset. Methods. Four group... (More)
Introduction. An open collaborative international network has been established which aims to improve inter-centre standards for collection of high-resolution, neurointensive care data on patients with traumatic brain injury. The group is also working towards the creation of an open access, detailed and validated database that will be useful for post-hoc hypothesis testing. In Part A, the underlying concept, the group coordination structure, membership guidelines and database access and publication criteria are described. Secondly, in part B, we describe a set of meetings funded by the EEC that allowed us to define a "Core Dataset" and we present the results of a feasibility exercise for collection of this core dataset. Methods. Four group meetings funded by the EEC have enabled definition of a "Core Dataset" to be collected from all centres regardless of specific project aim. A paper based pilot collection of data was conducted to determine the feasibility for collection of the core dataset. Specially designed forms to collect the core dataset demographic and clinical information as well as sample the time-series data elements were distributed by both email and standard mail to 22 BrainIT centres. A deadline of two months was set to receive completed forms back from centres. A pilot data collection of minute by minute physiological monitoring data was also performed. Findings. A core-dataset was defined and can be downloaded from the BrainIT web-site (go to "Core dataset" link at: www.brainit.org). Eighteen centres (82%) returned completed forms by the set deadline. Overall the feasibility for collection of the core data elements was high with only 10 of the 64 questions (16%) showing missing data. Of those 10 fields with missing data, the average number of centres not responding was 12% and the median 6%. An SQL database to hold the data has been designed and is being tested. Software tools for collection of the core dataset have been developed. Ethics approval has been granted for collection of multi-centre data as part of a pilot data collection study. Interpretation. The BrainIT network provides a more standardised and higher resolution data collection mechanism for research groups, organisations and the device industry to conduct multi-centre trials of new health care technology in patients with traumatic brain injury. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
health technology assessment, head injury, multi-centre network
in
Acta Neurochirurgica
volume
145
issue
8
pages
615 - 629
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • wos:000185228000003
  • pmid:14520540
  • scopus:0041829276
  • pmid:14520540
ISSN
0001-6268
DOI
10.1007/s00701-003-0066-6
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0465f68c-fece-4c57-8714-313fed9b033b (old id 301516)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 15:38:25
date last changed
2022-01-28 06:22:00
@article{0465f68c-fece-4c57-8714-313fed9b033b,
  abstract     = {{Introduction. An open collaborative international network has been established which aims to improve inter-centre standards for collection of high-resolution, neurointensive care data on patients with traumatic brain injury. The group is also working towards the creation of an open access, detailed and validated database that will be useful for post-hoc hypothesis testing. In Part A, the underlying concept, the group coordination structure, membership guidelines and database access and publication criteria are described. Secondly, in part B, we describe a set of meetings funded by the EEC that allowed us to define a "Core Dataset" and we present the results of a feasibility exercise for collection of this core dataset. Methods. Four group meetings funded by the EEC have enabled definition of a "Core Dataset" to be collected from all centres regardless of specific project aim. A paper based pilot collection of data was conducted to determine the feasibility for collection of the core dataset. Specially designed forms to collect the core dataset demographic and clinical information as well as sample the time-series data elements were distributed by both email and standard mail to 22 BrainIT centres. A deadline of two months was set to receive completed forms back from centres. A pilot data collection of minute by minute physiological monitoring data was also performed. Findings. A core-dataset was defined and can be downloaded from the BrainIT web-site (go to "Core dataset" link at: www.brainit.org). Eighteen centres (82%) returned completed forms by the set deadline. Overall the feasibility for collection of the core data elements was high with only 10 of the 64 questions (16%) showing missing data. Of those 10 fields with missing data, the average number of centres not responding was 12% and the median 6%. An SQL database to hold the data has been designed and is being tested. Software tools for collection of the core dataset have been developed. Ethics approval has been granted for collection of multi-centre data as part of a pilot data collection study. Interpretation. The BrainIT network provides a more standardised and higher resolution data collection mechanism for research groups, organisations and the device industry to conduct multi-centre trials of new health care technology in patients with traumatic brain injury.}},
  author       = {{Piper, I and Citerio, G and Chambers, I and Contant, C and Enblad, P and Fiddes, H and Howells, T and Kiening, K and Nilsson, Petra and Yau, YH}},
  issn         = {{0001-6268}},
  keywords     = {{health technology assessment; head injury; multi-centre network}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{8}},
  pages        = {{615--629}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Acta Neurochirurgica}},
  title        = {{The BrainIT group: concept and core dataset definition}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00701-003-0066-6}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s00701-003-0066-6}},
  volume       = {{145}},
  year         = {{2003}},
}