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Age and ageing
Published

Traumatic brain injury and mortality in older adults with and without pre-injury dementia

Authors

Helen Lai, Eyal Soreq, Niall J Bourke, Claire Baker, Karl Zimmerman, Megan E Parkinson, Sarah J C Daniels, Edward W Gregg, David Sharp, Lucia M Li

Abstract

Age Ageing. 2025 Nov 28;54(12):afaf341. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afaf341.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Incidence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) is rising in older adults. Dementia is a common comorbidity and may worsen post-TBI outcomes, but its effects have not been studied.

OBJECTIVE: To compare all-cause mortality following TBI or non-TBI trauma (NTT) and quantify the impacts of age, deprivation and dementia.

DESIGN: Population-based retrospective cohort study.

SETTING: Linked primary and secondary care electronic health records from the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage Databank.

SUBJECTS: Adult residents in Wales aged 18-100 with hospitalised TBI or NTT recorded between January 2000 and December 2022.

METHODS: Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate survival within 1, 6 and 12 months of hospitalised TBI/NTT in those with and without pre-injury dementia diagnosis. Groups were propensity-matched by age, sex and morbidities. Models were stratified by age, sex and deprivation.

RESULTS: A total of 23 428 TBIs (n = 18 940) and 589 169 NTTs (n = 421 259) were identified. TBIs were associated with higher mortality than NTT at all timepoints. Older age was associated with higher mortality after TBI, with 16.9% 1-month mortality in patients aged 65-79, and 31% in patients aged 80-100. In TBI patients, 30-day mortality was significant irrespective of dementia. About 6- and 12-month mortality were higher in those with than without pre-injury dementia diagnosis.

CONCLUSIONS: TBI is associated with higher all-cause mortality than NTT, particularly in older age. Among those with TBI, patients with pre-injury dementia had particularly high chronic mortality. There is an urgent need to understand the reasons for poor outcomes in older adult TBI populations, especially those with dementia.

PMID:41342613 | DOI:10.1093/ageing/afaf341

UK DRI Authors

David Sharp

Prof David Sharp

Centre Director

Using radical new approaches to assess the effects of dementia and improve the lives of people living with the condition

Prof David Sharp