4.7 Article

Neurotrauma Biomarker Levels and Adverse Symptoms Among Military and Law Enforcement Personnel Exposed to Occupational Overpressure Without Diagnosed Traumatic Brain Injury

Journal

JAMA NETWORK OPEN
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.6445

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Combat Casualty Care Research Program
  2. US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Military Operational Medicine Research Program
  3. Broad Agency Announcement Award from the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs [W81XWH-16-2-0001]

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This study aimed to evaluate the association between concussion-like symptoms and serum levels of neurotrauma biomarkers among military and law enforcement personnel. The results suggest that long-term exposure to LLOP during occupational training may affect serum levels of neurotrauma biomarkers. Assessing biomarkers and symptoms in healthy individuals may be beneficial for military occupational medicine risk management.
IMPORTANCE There is a scientific and operational need to define objective measures of exposure to low-level overpressure (LLOP) and concussion-like symptoms among persons with specialized occupations. OBJECTIVE To evaluate serum levels of neurotrauma biomarkers and their association with concussion-like symptoms reported by LLOP-exposed military and law enforcement personnel who are outwardly healthy and cleared to perform duties. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This retrospective cohort study, conducted from January 23, 2017, to October 21, 2019, used serum samples and survey data collected from healthy, male, active-duty military and law enforcement personnel assigned to operational training at 4 US Department of Defense and civilian law enforcement training sites. Personnel aged 18 years or older with prior LLOP exposure but no diagnosed traumatic brain injury or with acute blast exposure during sampling participated in the study. Serum samples from 30 control individuals were obtained from a commercial vendor. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Serum levels of glial fibrillary acidic protein, ubiquitin carboxyl hydrolase (UCH)-L1, neurofilament light chain, tau, amyloid beta (A beta)-40, and A beta-42 from a random sample (30 participants) of the LLOP-exposed cohort were compared with those of 30 age-matched controls. Associations between biomarker levels and self-reported symptoms or operational demographics in the remainder of the study cohort (76 participants) were assessed using generalized linear modeling or Spearman correlations with age as a covariate. RESULTS Among the 30 randomly sampled participants (mean [SD] age, 32 [7.75] years), serum levels of UCH-L1 (mean difference, 4.92; 95% CI, 0.71-9.14), tau (mean difference, 0.16; 95% CI, -0.06 to 0.39), A beta-40 (mean difference, 138.44; 95% CI, 116.32-160.56), and A beta-42 (mean difference, 4.97; 95% CI, 4.10-5.83) were elevated compared with those in controls. Among the remaining cohort of 76 participants (mean [SD] age, 34 [7.43] years), ear ringing was reported by 44 (58%) and memory or sleep problems were reported by 24 (32%) and 20 (26%), respectively. A total of 26 participants (34%) reported prior concussion. Amyloid beta-42 levels were associated with ear ringing (F-1,F-72 = 7.40; P = .008) and memory problems (F-1,F-72 = 9.20; P = .003). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The findings suggest that long-term LLOP exposure acquired during occupational training may be associated with serum levels of neurotrauma biomarkers. Assessment of biomarkers and concussion-like symptoms among personnel considered healthy at the time of sampling may be useful for military occupational medicine risk management.

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