# Organizational management of moderate and severe paediatric traumatic brain injury: results from a European survey

**Authors:** Sarah Hornshøj Pedersen, Radek Frič, Shruti Agrawal, Chiara Robba, Aurelia Peraud, Miroslav Gjurasin, Ondra Petr, Marianne Juhler, Bart Depreitere

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.bas.2025.105921 · Brain & Spine · 2026-01-19

## TL;DR

A European survey shows low case numbers and uneven access to expertise in managing moderate/severe pediatric traumatic brain injury.

## Contribution

First European survey examining organizational management of moderate/severe pediatric traumatic brain injury.

## Key findings

- Most centers reported fewer than 20 pediatric TBI cases annually.
- Access to pediatric anesthesiology correlates with hospital size.
- Confidence in care delivery is higher in centers with pediatric neurotrauma specialists.

## Abstract

Management of moderate/severe paediatric traumatic brain injury (mspTBI) varies across Europe. The decline in case numbers perceived in many regions raises concerns about maintaining high-quality, sustainable care.

This study aimed to examine the organization of mspTBI management in Europe, focusing on expertise availability, guideline adherence, neuromonitoring use, and clinician's confidence in care delivery through a survey.

A 34-question survey was distributed to European neurosurgical and intensive care communities. Only hospitals treating children with mspTBI were included. Centres were stratified by their catchment population size and their access to dedicated expertise.

Seventy-six institutions from 23 countries responded. Most centres reported a mspTBI case load of less than 20 children per year. Access to paediatric anesthesiology was significantly associated with centre size (p = 0.001), while access to paediatric neurosurgery, intensive or neurointensive care was not. Most centres (96 %) reported adherence to (inter)national guidelines. Intracranial pressure (78.7 %) and transcranial Doppler (70.7 %) were the most frequently available/used neuromonitoring modalities. Confidence in managing mspTBI was significantly higher in centres with paediatric neurosurgeons and, for older children, paediatric neuro-intensivists.

This first European survey examining organizational management of mspTBI reveals a low overall caseload and uneven access to paediatric expertise. Confidence in managing mspTBI correlates with availability of paediatric subspecialists. Guidelines are widely applied, independent of expert availability, but are alone insufficient to ensure treatment confidence. This finding underscores the need for improved guidelines and better access to paediatric neurotrauma expertise.

•Organization of management of moderate to severe paediatric traumatic brain injury in Europe was examined through a survey among European neurosurgical and intensive care communities.•Most centres reported a case load of moderate to severe paediatric traumatic brain injury of less than 20 children per year.•Confidence in managing moderate to severe traumatic brain injury in children correlates with availability of paediatric subspecialists.

Organization of management of moderate to severe paediatric traumatic brain injury in Europe was examined through a survey among European neurosurgical and intensive care communities.

Most centres reported a case load of moderate to severe paediatric traumatic brain injury of less than 20 children per year.

Confidence in managing moderate to severe traumatic brain injury in children correlates with availability of paediatric subspecialists.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** traumatic brain injury (MONDO:0858950)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** traumatic brain injury (MESH:D000070642), mspTBI (MESH:D045169)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

19 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12857177/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12857177