Rehospitalization Burden Profiles After Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: A Data-Driven Latent Class Analysis of the SCIMS Public-Use Database
Andrea Calderone, Maria Pia Onesta, Laura Simoncini, Antonino Nunnari, Fabrizio Sottile, Angelo Quartarone, Rocco Salvatore CalabròBackground/Objectives: Rehospitalization after traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is common, but binary or count summaries may obscure heterogeneity in timing, recurrence, frequency, and duration. We aimed to identify clinically interpretable rehospitalization burden profiles in the SCIMS 2021ARPublic dataset and examine descriptive associations with clinical correlates and participation outcomes. Methods: We analyzed Form I, Form II, and Record Status public-use files. Among 29,310 individuals with at least one non-lost follow-up interview, 28,745 with at least one non-missing rehospitalization indicator entered latent class analysis. Four prespecified indicators captured early, recurrent, frequent, and prolonged rehospitalization. Candidate two- through six-class models were compared using AIC, BIC, entropy, class size, posterior probabilities, and interpretability. Pairwise adjusted logistic models examined candidate clinical correlates in 10,407 participants with complete 2016+ follow-up data. Adjusted linear models examined CHART participation domains in 20,766–20,949 participants. Results: A four-profile solution was retained: low rehospitalization burden (59.8%), early/prolonged rehospitalization (18.9%), frequent/prolonged rehospitalization (7.7%), and high recurrent/frequent/prolonged burden (13.6%). UTI and pressure ulcer history showed the most consistent associations with burdened profiles. Severe pain and frequent sleep problems were associated with selected heavier-burden profiles, while depressive symptoms showed smaller and less precise associations. Sensitivity analyses supported structural stability while highlighting observation-time bias and classification uncertainty inherent to wave-based public-use data. Compared with the low-burden profile, burden profiles showed lower CHART scores, especially for mobility and occupation. Conclusions: Rehospitalization after traumatic SCI is heterogeneous. These utilization burden profiles summarize distinct observed patterns but require prospective validation before use in risk stratification or follow-up planning.