# Breaking barriers in trauma research: A narrative review of opportunities to leverage veterinary trauma for accelerated translation to clinical solutions for pets and people

**Authors:** Kelly E. Hall, Claire Tucker, Julie A. Dunn, Tracy Webb, Sarah A. Watts, Emrys Kirkman, Julien Guillaumin, Guillaume L. Hoareau, Heather F. Pidcoke

PMC · DOI: 10.1017/cts.2024.513 · Journal of Clinical and Translational Science · 2024-04-05

## TL;DR

This paper explores how veterinary trauma research can help improve trauma care for both animals and humans through collaborative, translational efforts.

## Contribution

The paper proposes a translational framework leveraging veterinary trauma to accelerate clinical solutions for both species.

## Key findings

- Collaborative, multidisciplinary teams can improve trauma outcomes for both humans and companion animals.
- Veterinary clinical trials can provide early data to reduce risks and costs in human clinical trials.
- Areas like resuscitation and trauma immunology show promise for translational research.

## Abstract

Trauma is a common cause of morbidity and mortality in humans and companion animals. Recent efforts in procedural development, training, quality systems, data collection, and research have positively impacted patient outcomes; however, significant unmet need still exists. Coordinated efforts by collaborative, translational, multidisciplinary teams to advance trauma care and improve outcomes have the potential to benefit both human and veterinary patient populations. Strategic use of veterinary clinical trials informed by expertise along the research spectrum (i.e., benchtop discovery, applied science and engineering, large laboratory animal models, clinical veterinary studies, and human randomized trials) can lead to increased therapeutic options for animals while accelerating and enhancing translation by providing early data to reduce the cost and the risk of failed human clinical trials. Active topics of collaboration across the translational continuum include advancements in resuscitation (including austere environments), acute traumatic coagulopathy, trauma-induced coagulopathy, traumatic brain injury, systems biology, and trauma immunology. Mechanisms to improve funding and support innovative team science approaches to current problems in trauma care can accelerate needed, sustainable, and impactful progress in the field. This review article summarizes our current understanding of veterinary and human trauma, thereby identifying knowledge gaps and opportunities for collaborative, translational research to improve multispecies outcomes. This translational trauma group of MDs, PhDs, and DVMs posit that a common understanding of injury patterns and resulting cellular dysregulation in humans and companion animals has the potential to accelerate translation of research findings into clinical solutions.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (taxon 9606)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** traumatic brain injury (MESH:D000070642), Trauma (MESH:D014947), coagulopathy (MESH:D001778)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

132 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11075112/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11075112