• Journal of neurotrauma · Mar 2016

    Review

    Operation Brain Trauma Therapy: Approach to Modeling, Therapy Evaluation, Drug Selection, and Biomarker Assessments, for a Multi-Center Pre-Clinical Drug Screening Consortium for Acute Therapies in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury.

    • Patrick M Kochanek, Helen M Bramlett, C Edward Dixon, Deborah A Shear, W Dalton Dietrich, Kara E Schmid, Stefania Mondello, Kevin K W Wang, Ronald L Hayes, John T Povlishock, and Frank C Tortella.
    • 1 Department of Critical Care Medicine, Safar Center for Resuscitation Research, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine , Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
    • J. Neurotrauma. 2016 Mar 15; 33 (6): 513-22.

    AbstractTraumatic brain injury (TBI) was the signature injury in both the Iraq and Afghan wars and the magnitude of its importance in the civilian setting is finally being recognized. Given the scope of the problem, new therapies are needed across the continuum of care. Few therapies have been shown to be successful. In severe TBI, current guidelines-based acute therapies are focused on the reduction of intracranial hypertension and optimization of cerebral perfusion. One factor considered important to the failure of drug development and translation in TBI relates to the recognition that TBI is extremely heterogeneous and presents with multiple phenotypes even within the category of severe injury. To address this possibility and attempt to bring the most promising therapies to clinical trials, we developed Operation Brain Trauma Therapy (OBTT), a multicenter, pre-clinical drug screening consortium for acute therapies in severe TBI. OBTT was developed to include a spectrum of established TBI models at experienced centers and assess the effect of promising therapies on both conventional outcomes and serum biomarker levels. In this review, we outline the approach to TBI modeling, evaluation of therapies, drug selection, and biomarker assessments for OBTT, and provide a framework for reports in this issue on the first five therapies evaluated by the consortium.

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