BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine (Jun 2021)

Pac-12 CARE-Affiliated Program: structure, methods and initial results

  • Kimberly G Harmon,
  • Sourav K Poddar,
  • Adam D Bohr,
  • Matthew B McQueen,
  • Jamshid Ghajar,
  • Doug F Aukerman,
  • Russell Romano,
  • Theresa D Hernández,
  • Niki Konstantinides,
  • David J Petron,
  • Christopher Giza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001055
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2

Abstract

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Sport-related concussion has garnered increasing scientific attention and research over the last decade. Collegiate student-athletes represent an important cohort in this field. As such, the Pac-12 CARE-Affiliated Program (CAP) was formed in 2017 as a regional hub of the Concussion Assessment, Research and Education (CARE) consortium. CAP is multisite, prospective, longitudinal study that aims to improve student-athlete health by identifying factors associated with concussion incidence and recovery and using this knowledge to inform best clinical practices and policy decisions. CAP employed a staggered rollout across the Pac-12, with the first four institutions enrolling in fall 2018. After receiving institutional review board (IRB) approval, these institutions began consenting student-athletes to share clinical concussion and baseline data for research purposes. Athletes completed baseline testing that included a medical questionnaire, concussion history and a battery for clinical concussion assessments. Concussed student-athletes were given the same battery of assessments in addition to full injury and return to play reports. Clinicians at each university worked with a data coordinator to ensure appropriate reporting, and the Pac-12 Concussion Coordinating Unit at the University of Colorado Boulder provided oversight for quality control of the data study wide. During year 1, CAP consented 2181 student-athletes and tracked 140 concussions. All research was conducted with the appropriate IRB approval across the participating Pac-12 institutions. Data security and dissemination are managed by the Presagia Sports Athlete Electronic Health Record software (Montreal, Quebec, Canada) and QuesGen Systems (San Francisco, California, USA).