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cranioplasty_prognosis [2025/07/01 18:06] – administrador | cranioplasty_prognosis [2025/07/01 18:08] (current) – administrador | ||
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* Includes mobility, communication, | * Includes mobility, communication, | ||
* Tools: EQ-5D, SF-36, disease-specific QoL instruments. | * Tools: EQ-5D, SF-36, disease-specific QoL instruments. | ||
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- | ==== 📘 COAST Study Core Outcome Set (2025) ==== | ||
- | A standardized Core Outcome Set for cranioplasty after stroke or TBI was proposed by the [[COAST study]] (Mee et al., Brain & Spine, 2025), including: | ||
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- | * Neurological function | ||
- | * Cognitive performance | ||
- | * Seizure incidence | ||
- | * Surgical complications | ||
- | * HRQoL | ||
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- | Recommended timepoints: baseline, 3 months, 12 months. | ||
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- | ==== 📊 Summary Table ==== | ||
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- | ^ Domain | ||
- | | Neurological recovery | ||
- | | Functional status | ||
- | | Complications | ||
- | | Cosmetic satisfaction | ||
- | | Quality of life | EQ-5D, SF-36, disease-specific PROMs | 3–12 months | ||
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- | ===== Consensus methodology research ===== | ||
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- | In a multi-phase [[consensus methodology]] including [[systematic review]], [[qualitative study]], two-round [[Delphi process]], and final [[consensus meeting]]. | ||
- | Mee et al. | ||
- | from Cambridge, Oulu, Madrid, Ibadan, Bristol, Cali, Winnipeg, Perth, Modena, London, Lund, Worcester (MA), Adelaide, Milan, Norwich | ||
- | published in the **Journal: | ||
- | to develop an internationally agreed-upon core outcome set (COS) for [[cranioplasty]] following a [[decompressive craniectomy]] for [[stroke]] or [[traumatic brain injury]]. | ||
- | The COAST study successfully defined a 20-item core outcome set across four domains (life impact, pathophysiological manifestations, | ||
- | ((Mee H, Korhonen TK, Castaño-Leon AM, Adeleye A, Allanson J, Anwar F, Bhagavatula ID, Bond K, Clement C, Rubiano AM, Grieve K, Hawryluk G, Helmy A, Honeybul S, Iaccarino C, Lagares A, Marcus H, Marklund N, Muehlschlegel S, Owen N, Paul M, Pomeroy V, Shukla D, Servadei F, Viaroli E, Warburton E, Wells A, Timofeev I, Turner C, Whiting G, Hutchinson P, Kolias A. A core outcome set for cranioplasty following [[stroke]] or [[traumatic brain injury]] - The COAST study. Brain Spine. 2025 Jun 1;5:104288. doi: 10.1016/ | ||
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- | ===== Critical Review ===== | ||
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- | The COAST study represents an ambitious and commendable effort to bring standardization to an under-structured field—[[cranioplasty outcome]]s. By following the COMET methodology and involving a multidisciplinary and international panel, it enhances the legitimacy and breadth of the final COS. | ||
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- | **Strengths: | ||
- | - Wide stakeholder inclusion ensures diverse perspectives (patients, surgeons, allied health professionals). | ||
- | - Rigid adherence to established consensus-building methodology. | ||
- | - The scale of participation (153 individuals across 16 countries) and structured Delphi rounds followed by a consensus meeting reflect robust procedural rigor. | ||
- | - A focused categorization of outcomes into clinically meaningful domains is pragmatic. | ||
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- | **Weaknesses: | ||
- | - No formal validation of the selected outcomes in prospective cohorts—feasibility and sensitivity remain theoretical. | ||
- | - Regional representation appears skewed toward academic centers in high-income countries; the extent to which the COS reflects the realities of resource-limited settings is unclear. | ||
- | - The study refrains from discussing any potential conflicts between patient-centered outcomes and those favored by clinicians, nor does it address the weighting or prioritization of these 20 outcomes. | ||
- | - Lack of granularity in reporting stakeholder-specific scoring trends reduces interpretability of consensus dynamics. | ||
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- | **Final Verdict:** Solid methodology but lacks immediate translational validation. It is an important foundational step for future research standardization, | ||
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- | **Takeaway for Practicing Neurosurgeons: | ||
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- | **Bottom Line:** Methodologically sound initiative establishing a consensus-based framework for cranioplasty outcomes, but clinical adoption will hinge on future validation studies. | ||
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- | **Rating:** 7/10 | ||
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- | **Date of Publication: | ||
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