Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the largest cause of death and disability of persons under 45 years old, worldwide. Independent of the distribution, outcomes such as disability are associated with huge societal costs. The heterogeneity of TBI and its complicated biological response have helped clarify the limitations of current pharmacological approaches to TBI management. Five decades of effort have made some strides in reducing TBI mortality but little progress has been made to mitigate TBI-induced disability. Lessons learned from the failure of numerous randomized clinical trials and the inability to scale up results from single center clinical trials with neuroprotective agents led to the formation of organizations such as the Neurological Emergencies Treatment Trials (NETT) Network, and international collaborative comparative effectiveness research (CER) to re-orient TBI clinical research. With initiatives such as TRACK-TBI, generating rich and comprehensive human datasets with demographic, clinical, genomic, proteomic, imaging, and detailed outcome data across multiple time points has become the focus of the field in the United States (US). In addition, government institutions such as the US Department of Defense are investing in groups such as Operation Brain Trauma Therapy (OBTT), a multicenter, pre-clinical drug-screening consortium to address the barriers in translation. The consensus from such efforts including “The Lancet Neurology Commission” and current literature is that unmitigated cell death processes, incomplete debris clearance, aberrant neurotoxic immune, and glia cell response induce progressive tissue loss and spatiotemporal magnification of primary TBI. Our analysis suggests that the focus of neuroprotection research needs to shift from protecting dying and injured neurons at acute time points to modulating the aberrant glial response in sub-acute and chronic time points. One unexpected agent with neuroprotective properties that shows promise is transplantation of neural stem cells. In this review we present (i) a short survey of TBI epidemiology and summary of current care, (ii) findings of past neuroprotective clinical trials and possible reasons for failure based upon insights from human and preclinical TBI pathophysiology studies, including our group's inflammation-centered approach, (iii) the unmet need of TBI and unproven treatments and lastly, (iv) present evidence to support the rationale for sub-acute neural stem cell therapy to mediate enduring neuroprotection.

Highlights

  • TBI is a critical public health problem and one of the leading causes of death and disability around the globe [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Attempts to improve cerebral oxygenation with blood substitutes such as perfluorocarbons (PFCs) alleviated hypoxia in animal models of Penetrating ballistic-like brain injury (PBBI) [78, 180, 181]. Clinical translation of this artificial oxygen carrier was deemed unsafe due to the development of thrombocytopenia, an abnormality that could be detrimental in TBI patients, which led to the cessation of the Safety and Tolerability of Oxycyte in Patients With Traumatic Brain Injury (STOP-TBI) trial [182]

  • Analysis of the trial failures has led to insights into the mechanisms that need to be targeted, neuroinflammation

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Summary

Introduction

TBI is a critical public health problem and one of the leading causes of death and disability around the globe [1,2,3,4,5]. A recent estimate of the Global Incidence of TBI puts it at ∼939 cases per 100,000 people each year with 79% being mild TBI. The calculated incidence of TBI in the Americas (including United States (US) /Canada) is 1,299 cases per 100,000 people each year. In the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, road traffic accidents accounted for >40% of TBI incidence [9]. The annual cost of TBI in the US is estimated to be between $168 billion in medical spending and $223 billion in work losses [18]. It is estimated at $400 billion [19]. This “secondary mechanism fueled” histopathology seen in human TBI is recapitulated with preclinical TBI models [31,32,33,34,35,36] and offers an opportunity to test interventions

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