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- Title
Relationship Between Level of American Football Playing and Diagnosis of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy in a Selection Bias Analysis.
- Authors
LeClair, Jessica; Weuve, Jennifer; Fox, Matthew P; Mez, Jesse; Alosco, Michael L; Nowinski, Chris; McKee, Ann; Tripodis, Yorghos
- Abstract
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a neurodegenerative disease associated with exposure to repetitive head impacts such as those from American football. Our understanding of this association is based on research in autopsied brains, since CTE can only be diagnosed postmortem. Such studies are susceptible to selection bias, which needs to be accounted for to ensure a generalizable estimate of the association between repetitive head impacts and CTE. We evaluated the relationship between level of American football playing and CTE diagnosis after adjusting for selection bias. The sample included 290 deceased male former American football players who donated their brains to the Veterans Affairs–Boston University–Concussion Legacy Foundation (VA-BU-CLF) Brain Bank between 2008 and 2019. After adjustment for selection bias, college-level and professional football players had 2.38 (95% simulation interval (SI): 1.16, 5.94) and 2.47 (95% SI: 1.46, 4.79) times the risk of being diagnosed with CTE as high-school–level players, respectively; these estimates are larger than estimates with no selection bias adjustment. Since CTE is currently diagnosed only postmortem, we additionally provide plausible scenarios for CTE risk ratios for each level of play during the former players' lifetime. This study provides further evidence to support a dose-response relationship between American football playing and CTE.
- Subjects
UNITED States; RISK assessment; MEDICAL cadavers; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; FOOTBALL injuries; DOSE-response relationship in biochemistry; CHRONIC traumatic encephalopathy; CONFIDENCE intervals; COLLEGE sports; DISEASE risk factors
- Publication
American Journal of Epidemiology, 2022, Vol 191, Issue 8, p1429
- ISSN
0002-9262
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/aje/kwac075