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. 2018 Aug 14;320(6):580–588. doi: 10.1001/jama.2018.10211

Association Between Traumatic Brain Injury and Risk of Suicide

Trine Madsen 1,2,, Annette Erlangsen 1,3,4,5, Sonja Orlovska 2, Ramy Mofaddy 2, Merete Nordentoft 1,4,2, Michael E Benros 2
PMCID: PMC6142987  PMID: 30120477

This cohort study uses Danish national registry data to investigate associations between traumatic brain injury and suicide in the general Danish population between 1980 and 2014.

Key Points

Question

What is the association between medical contact for traumatic brain injury (TBI) and risk of suicide?

Findings

In this registry-based retrospective cohort study from Denmark that included 34 529 deaths by suicide over 35 years, individuals with medical contact for traumatic brain injury, compared with the general population without traumatic brain injury, had an increased risk of suicide, incident rate ratio of 1.90.

Meaning

Traumatic brain injury may be associated with increased risk of suicide.

Abstract

Importance

Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) can have serious long-term consequences, including psychiatric disorders. However, few studies have assessed the association between TBI and risk of suicide.

Objective

To examine the association between TBI and subsequent suicide.

Design, Setting, and Participants

Retrospective cohort study using nationwide registers covering 7 418 391 individuals (≥10 years) living in Denmark (1980-2014) with 164 265 624 person-years’ follow-up; 567 823 (7.6%) had a medical contact for TBI. Data were analyzed using Poisson regression adjusted for relevant covariates, including fractures not involving the skull, psychiatric diagnoses, and deliberate self-harm.

Exposure

Medical contacts for TBI recorded in the National Patient Register (1977-2014) as mild TBI (concussion), skull fracture without documented TBI, and severe TBI (head injuries with evidence of structural brain injury).

Main Outcomes and Measures

Suicide recorded in the Danish Cause of Death register until December 31, 2014.

Results

Of 34 529 individuals who died by suicide (mean age, 52 years [SD, 18 years]; 32.7% women; absolute rate 21 per 100 000 person-years [95% CI, 20.8-21.2]), 3536 (10.2%) had medical contact: 2701 with mild TBI, 174 with skull fracture without documented TBI, and 661 with severe TBI. The absolute suicide rate was 41 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 39.2-41.9) among those with TBI vs 20 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 19.7-20.1) among those with no diagnosis of TBI. The adjusted incidence rate ratio (IRR) was 1.90 (95% CI, 1.83-1.97). Compared with those without TBI, severe TBI (absolute rate, 50.8 per 100 000 person-years; 95% CI, 46.9-54.6) was associated with an IRR of 2.38 (95% CI, 2.20-2.58), whereas mild TBI (absolute rate, 38.6 per 100 000 person-years; 95% CI, 37.1-40.0), and skull fracture without documented TBI (absolute rate, 42.4 per 100 000 person-years; 95% CI, 36.1-48.7) had an IRR of 1.81 (95% CI, 1.74-1.88) and an IRR of 2.01 (95% CI, 1.73-2.34), respectively. Suicide risk was associated with number of medical contacts for TBI compared with those with no TBI contacts: 1 TBI contact, absolute rate, 34.3 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 33.0-35.7; IRR, 1.75; 95% CI, 1.68-1.83); 2 TBI contacts, absolute rate, 59.8 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 55.1-64.6; IRR, 2.31; 95% CI, 2.13-2.51); and 3 or more TBI contacts, absolute rate, 90.6 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 82.3-98.9; IRR, 2.59; 95% CI, 2.35-2.85; all P < .001 for the IRR’s). Compared with the general population, temporal proximity since the last medical contact for TBI was associated with risk of suicide (P<.001), with an IRR of 3.67 (95% CI, 3.33-4.04) within the first 6 months and an incidence IRR of 1.76 (95% CI, 1.67-1.86) after 7 years.

Conclusions and Relevance

In this nationwide registry-based retrospective cohort study individuals with medical contact for TBI, compared with the general population without TBI, had increased suicide risk.

Introduction

Individuals with a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI) have been shown to have higher rates of nonfatal deliberate self-harm, suicide, and all-cause mortality than members of the general population.1,2,3 Individuals with TBI may experience significant physical, cognitive, and emotional symptoms that place them at higher risk of suicide.4 A recent systematic review3 supported this premise by reporting an association of increased risk of suicide among TBI survivors compared with individuals with no TBI. However, most previous studies examining the relation of TBI and completed suicide have been limited by methodological shortcomings, such as small sample sizes, in particular very low numbers of suicide cases with TBI (maximum of 105 cases in studies that also included a control population).5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12 These factors have compromised more detailed analyses, for instance with respect to severity, timely relation, and control of confounding variables. Several studies2,13 have used standardized mortality rate (SMR) calculations based on governmental released age- and sex-mortality rates to estimate the risk of suicide associated with TBI. These estimates have varied widely, with reported SMRs ranging from 0.82 to more than 4, and they have lacked appropriate confounding control.2,7,8,10,14 Recently, a Swedish register-based study reported a 3-fold higher risk of suicide in patients with TBI than in the age- and sex-matched general population; however, this estimate was not adjusted for important risk factors related to both TBI and suicide, such as preexisting psychiatric illness and nonfatal deliberate self-harm.15

The primary objective of this retrospective cohort study was to examine the association between TBI and subsequent suicide.

Methods

An anonymized data set was used for research purposes, and the project was approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency (journal number 2012-58-0004). Hence according to Danish legislation, informed consent from participants was not required.

Study Population

All individuals who were alive and living in Denmark during the study period were included in our analyses. In total, the cohort comprised 7 418 390 individuals aged 10 years or older from January 1, 1980, who were followed up until their dates of death or emigration from Denmark or December 31, 2014, whichever came first. By using the unique personal identification number assigned to each person in Denmark, linkage of data between various national registries was possible. We retrieved data from the Danish Civil Registration System,16 the Database for Integrated Labour Market Research,17 the National Hospital Register,18 the Psychiatric Central Research Register,19 and the Cause of Death Register.20 All registers have full national coverage and contain continuously updated administrative data on all residents living in Denmark. Diagnoses in the National Hospital Register18 and the Psychiatric Central Research Register19 were recorded according to the diagnostic system of the International Classification of Diseases, Eighth Revision (ICD-8) until January 1, 1994; after that, ICD-10 codes were used. Private psychiatric hospital treatment does not exist in Denmark; however, about 1% of somatic hospital beds are located in private hospitals.21

Measures

Exposure Variables

Traumatic brain injury was recorded in the National Patient Register, which covers 3 different forms of medical contacts. Since 1977, TBI was recorded for inpatient treatment and from 1995, contacts on outpatient visits and visits to emergency units were included in the registers. If a patient was registered twice within a month for a TBI, this was considered to be a recording of the same event. Traumatic brain injury was categorized into the following types: (1) mild TBI (defined as concussion), (2) skull fracture without documented TBI, and (3) severe TBI (head injuries with evidence of structural brain injury) (see the ICD-codes in eTable 1 in the Supplement). This categorization is based on the definition given by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and has been used in prior population-based studies of TBI.22,23 In the analyses of TBI severity, these categories were mutually exclusive and individuals were categorized according to severity, ranging from mild TBI through skull fracture without documented TBI to severe TBI.

To assess the association between TBI and suicide in greater depth, we included the following covariates: number of medical contacts for likely distinct TBI events (0, 1, 2 or ≥3), accumulated number of days in hospital treatment for TBI (<1, same day discharge; 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6-14; and ≥15 days), age at first TBI (0-10, >11-15, >16-20, >21-40, >41-60, and ≥61 years), and time since last medical contact for TBI (0-6 months, >6-12 months, >1-2 years, >2-3 years, >3-4 years, >4-5 years, >5-6 years, >6-7 years, ≥7 years since discharge).

Outcome

From the Cause of Death Register,20 we retrieved the outcome measure on death by suicide (ICD-8 codes E950-E959 or ICD-10 codes X60-X84, Y87).

Important Covariates

We also obtained diagnoses of fractures not involving the skull or spine (non–central nervous system [CNS]–related fractures), to explore if fractures that occur to the head vs other fractures were associated with a higher risk of suicide and to adjust for this indicator of other injuries. From the National Patient Register, diagnoses of epilepsy were also included because people with epilepsy might have a higher frequency of TBI and psychiatric disorders.24,25,26 In addition, estimates were adjusted for long-term physical diseases using the Charlson comorbidity index27 (eTable 1 in the Supplement).

Psychiatric illness and nonfatal deliberate self-harm are associated with suicide,28 so data on contacts for these issues were retrieved from the Psychiatric Central Research Register,19 including all diagnoses given during hospital contact to inpatients since 1969 while outpatient and emergency department contacts were added in 1995 (eTable 1 in the Supplement). Contacts due to deliberate self-harm were identified using ICD-8 codes 950-959 or ICD-10 codes X60-X84 or when the reason for contact was indicated as deliberate self-harm using both somatic and psychiatric hospital registries. In addition, patient contacts at a psychiatric hospital where a diagnosis of injury or poisoning (ICD-10 codes S51, S55, S59, S61, S65, S69, T36-T50, or T52-T60) had been recorded and no record of a substance misuse disorder existed (ICD-10 codes F11-F19) were considered to be deliberate self-harm.

The Danish Civil Registration System16 and the Database for Integrated Labour Market Research17 include data on sex, age, and marital status (never married, married or registered partnership, divorced, widowed, or unknown), cohabitation status (cohabitation, no cohabitation), educational level (elementary school, vocational training, high school, university degree, ongoing or missing), and socioeconomic status (working, unemployed, disability pension, early retirement, student, and other or missing).

Statistical Analysis

Incidence rate ratios (IRRs) were estimated using adjusted Poisson regression models and time-varying variables (all variables were time-varying except for sex) using SAS (SAS Institute Inc; version 9.4). This method approximates Cox regression.29 All incidence IRRs provided in the Tables represents results of between group tests of difference. First, our primary outcome was to estimate the risk of suicide among individuals diagnosed and discharged alive with TBI relative to individuals without head injuries. The basic model was adjusted for sex, age, and calendar period. In the fully adjusted models, we further adjusted for marital status, cohabitation status, socioeconomic status, other injuries, epilepsy, the Charlson comorbidity index (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or ≥6 chronic disorders),18,27 “pre-TBI psychiatric disorders,” ie, psychiatric disorders diagnosed before any medical contact for TBI, and equivalently “pre-TBI deliberate self-harm.” Second, in a range of fully adjusted models, we examined how suicide was associated with different measures of TBI, such as (1) TBI severity, (2) number of TBI contacts, (3) days in treatment for TBI, (4) age at first TBI, (5) injury type, and (6) time since last TBI. We also tested the following covariates for trend: number of medical contacts for likely distinct TBI events, accumulated number of days in hospital treatment for TBI, and time since last medical contact for TBI. Test of trend was 2-sided and performed with the Cochran-Armitage test.

No adjustment was carried out for post-TBI psychiatric disorders and post-TBI deliberate self-harm because these potentially may act as mediators between TBI and suicide. To explore this further, we estimated incidence IRRs of the risk of suicide associated with before and after TBI psychiatric diagnosis and deliberate self-harm, respectively, in analyses confined to patients with TBI. In addition, multiplicative interaction analyses were carried out between TBI and pre-TBI psychiatric disorders and pre-TBI deliberate self-harm, respectively. In eTables 2 and 3 in the Supplement, the results of test of interaction terms are provided in the footnotes.

We also tested the overall association between TBI and suicide in a sub-cohort of individuals 18 years or more old born after 1962 to validate the association among individuals with full register follow-up as well as in a subcohort excluding those who received a TBI diagnosis in a deliberate self-harm episode.

Overall, the level of statistical significance was P <.05, and tests were 2-sided. To minimize type I errors due to multiple testing, all presented P values are Bonferroni corrected with a factor 53 equal to the total number of carried out tests, and statistically significant estimates (with a P <.00095 after Bonferroni correction) were noted in the Tables.

Results

Of the 7 418 391 living residents of Denmark during the 1980-2014 follow-up period (observed for a total of 164 265 624 person-years; Table 1), 567 823 had received a diagnosis of TBI (mean age at first TBI, 34.3 years [SD, 23.6 years], 41% women). Of the total population, 423 502 individuals (5.7%) were diagnosed with a mild TBI, 24 221 (0.3%) with skull fracture, and 120 100 (1.6%) with severe TBI. In all, 34 529 individuals died by suicide, mean age of 52 years (23 238 men; 11 291 women) and an overall absolute rate of 21.0 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 20.8-21.2). Among the 34 529 suicides, 3536 (10.2%) had previously been diagnosed with TBI (2578 men; 958 women), including 2701 with mild TBI, 174 with skull fracture without documented TBI, and 661 with severe TBI (Table 2).

Table 1. Suicides Among Individuals With or Without a Traumatic Brain Injury Diagnosis.

Characteristics No Traumatic Brain Injurya Traumatic Brain Injurya
No. of Suicides No. of Individuals Person-Years Suicide Rate per 100 000 Person-Years (95% CI) No. of Suicides No. of Individuals Person-Years Suicide Rate per 100 000 Person-Years (95% CI)
Total sample 30 993 6 850 568 155 547 816 19.9 (19.7-20.1) 3536 567 823 8 717 809 40.6 (39.2-41.9)
Female 10 333 3 370 464 79 907 964 12.9 (12.7-13.2) 958 331 283 3 486 838 27.5 (25.7-29.2)
Male 20 660 3 480 104 75 639 853 27.3 (26.9-27.7) 2578 236 540 5 230 971 49.3 (47.4-51.2)
Marital Status
Never married 8460 2 328 003 57 351 734 14.8 (14.4-15.1) 1456 228 386 4 457 070 32.7 (31.0-34.3)
Married or regular partnership 13 034 2 848 577 73 329 800 17.8 (17.5-18.1) 1024 195 165 2 847 597 36.0 (33.8-38.2)
Divorced 5221 656 993 12 176 573 42.9 (41.7-44.0) 790 82 468 970 905 81.4 (75.7-87.0)
Widowed or unknown 4278 1 016 995 12 689 709 33.7 (32.7-34.7) 266 61 804 442 236 60.1 (52.9-67.4)
Cohabitation Status
Yes 13 953 3 904 296 102 773 420 13.6 (13.4-13.8) 1147 288 794 4 817 192 23.8 (22.4-25.2)
No 17 040 2 946 272 52 774 396 32.3 (31.8-32.8) 2389 279 029 3 900 617 61.2 (58.8-63.7)
Educational Level
Elementary school 24 233 5 345 816 118 697 403 20.4 (20.2-20.7) 2596 424 383 6 523 481 39.8 (38.3-41.3)
Vocational training 3103 548 530 14 968 305 20.7 (20.0-21.5) 487 55 272 969 136 50.3 (45.8-54.7)
High school 2229 467 674 11 967 172 18.6 (17.9-19.4) 299 47 206 701 234 42.6 (37.8-47.5)
University degree 320 113 164 2 661 425 12.0 (10.7-13.3) 31 10 498 171 930 18.0 (11.7-24.4)
Ongoing or missing 1108 375 384 7 253 512 15.3 (14.4-16.2) 123 30 464 352 027 34.9 (28.8-41.1)
Socioeconomic Status
Working 3773 2 449 108 51 962 417 7.3 (7.0-7.5) 567 237 166 3 801 017 14.9 (13.7-16.1)
Unemployed 600 212 607 4 014 386 14.9 (13.8-16.1) 181 36 348 475 051 38.1 (32.6-43.7)
Disability pension 2041 273 905 4 660 465 43.8 (41.9-45.7) 526 53 097 662 876 79.4 (72.6-86.1)
Early retirement or retired 3742 1 619 246 19 371 870 19.3 (18.7-19.9) 309 110 191 871 680 35.4 (31.5-39.4)
Student or others 285 930 841 10 705 503 2.7 (2.4-3.0) 42 67 704 777 115 5.4 (3.8-7.0)
Missing 20 552 1 364 861 64 833 174 31.7 (31.3-32.1) 1911 63 317 2 130 070 89.7 (85.7-93.7)
Fractures Not Involving the Skull or Spine
No 26 745 5 183 808 136 820 949 19.5 (19.3-19.8) 2162 320 362 5 939 942 36.4 (34.9-37.9)
Yes 4248 1 666 760 18 726 867 22.7 (22.0-23.4) 1374 247 461 2 777 866 49.5 (46.8-52.1)
Epilepsy
No 30 328 6 713 439 153 830 167 19.7 (19.5-19.9) 3202 532 540 8 319 191 38.5 (37.2-39.8)
Yes 665 137 129 1 717 649 38.7 (35.8-41.7) 334 35 283 398 617 83.8 (74.8-92.8)
Charlson Comorbidity Index (Chronic Disorders)27
None 24 414 4 677 403 137 457 373 17.8 (17.5-18.0) 2712 392 059 7 419 233 36.6 (35.2-37.9)
1 3687 948 414 10 685 147 34.5 (33.4-35.6) 517 87 791 825 380 62.6 (57.2-68.0)
2 1953 723 416 5 350 422 36.5 (34.9-38.1) 181 47 923 311 049 58.2 (49.7-66.7)
3 533 264 371 1 288 325 41.4 (37.9-44.9) 72 20 993 97 234 74.0 (56.9-91.2)
4 disorders 150 872 651 328 499 45.7 (38.4-53.0) 15 7999 29 616 50.6 (25.0-76.3)
5 136 97 830 278 561 48.8 (40.6-57.0) 14 6140 18 242 76.7 (36.5-117.0)
≥6 120 51 869 159 489 75.2 (61.8-88.7) 25 4918 17 054 146.6 (89.1-204.1)
Pretraumatic Brain Injury Psychiatric Disorder
No 20 220 6 182 893 147 203 422 13.7 (13.5-13.9) 2693 520 418 8 219 174 32.8 (31.5-34.0)
Yes 10 773 667 675 8 344 394 129.1 (126.7-131.5) 843 47 405 498 634 169.1 (157.6-180.5)
Pretraumatic Brain Injury Deliberate Self-harm
No 24 976 6 742 863 153 672 792 16.3 (16.1-16.5) 3066 552 882 8 534 233 35.9 (34.7-37.2)
Yes 6017 107 705 1 875 024 320.9 (312.8-329.0) 470 14 941 183 576 256.0 (232.9-279.2)
a

Mean age (SD) at the last observation for individuals with no traumatic brain injury was 52.7 (23.6) years; for individuals with it, 49.3 (21.7) years.

Table 2. Risk of Suicide by Medical Contact for Traumatic Brain Injury.

No Medical Contacts for Traumatic Brain Injury Medical Contacts for Traumatic Brain Injury Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Skull Fracture Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
No. of suicides 30 993 3536 2701 174 661
Individuals 6 850 568 567 823 423 502 24 221 120 100
Person-years 155 547 816 8 717 809 7 005 537 410 166 1 302 105
Rate per 100 000 Person-Years (95% CI)
Suicide 19.9 (19.7-20.1) 40.6 (39.2-41.9) 38.6 (37.1-40.0) 42.4 (36.1-48.7) 50.8 (46.9-54.6)
Difference 1 [Reference] 20.7 (19.3-22.1) 18.7 (17.2-20.2) 22.5 (16.2-28.8) 30.9 (27.0-34.8)
Incidence Rate Ratio Variable Adjustment (95% CI)
Basic modela 1 [Reference] 2.64 (2.55-2.74)c 2.53 (2.43-2.63)c 2.42 (2.09-2.81)c 3.35 (3.10-3.62)c
Fully adjustedb 1 [Reference] 1.90 (1.83-1.97)c 1.81 (1.74-1.88)c 2.01 (1.73-2.34)c 2.38 (2.20-2.58)c
a

Sex, age, and calendar period.

b

Sex, age, calendar period, educational level, cohabitation status, socioeconomic status, marital status, fractures not involving the skull or the spine, epilepsy, Charlson comorbidity index, pretraumatic brain injury psychiatric diagnosis, and pretraumatic brain injury deliberate self-harm.

c

P < .001 after adjustment for multiple comparisons.

The absolute rate of suicide in individuals with hospital contact for TBI was 40.6 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 39.2-41.9) compared with 19.9 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 19.7-20.1) in those with no hospital contact for TBI, for a difference of 20.7 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 19.3-22.1). The IRR was 2.64 (95% CI, 2.55-2.74) in the model adjusted for sex, age, and calendar period and was 1.90 (95% CI, 1.83-1.97) in the fully adjusted model. Furthermore, the fully adjusted analyses showed an increased risk of suicide by TBI severity: the absolute rate for mild TBI was 38.6 per 100 000 person-years (95% CI, 37.1-40.0) with an IRR of 1.81 (95% CI, 1.74-1.88); 42.4 per 100 000 person-years, skull fracture (95% CI, 36.1-48.7) with an IRR of 2.01 (95% CI, 1.73-2.34, P < .001), and 50.8 per 100 000 person-years, severe TBI (95% CI, 46.9-54.6) with an IRR of 2.38 (95% CI, 2.20-2.58, P < .001) compared with individuals with no medical contact for TBI (Table 2). Individuals with a severe TBI also had a higher risk of suicide than individuals with a mild TBI (between-group difference IRR, 1.32; 95% CI, 1.21-1.44; P < .001) but not significantly different compared with those who had a skull fracture (IRR, 1.18; 95% CI, 1.00-1.40; P = .048). There was no significant difference in suicide risk between those with a mild TBI and a skull fracture (IRR, 1.11; 95% CI, 0.96-1.30; P = .17).

A higher suicide rate was noted with increasing number of medical contacts for likely distinct TBI events (test for trend, P < .001); compared with those with no TBI contact, 1 contact was associated with an IRR of 1.75 (95% CI, 1.68-1.83, P < .001) whereas 2 contacts had an IRR of 2.31 (95% CI, 2.13-2.51), and 3 or more contacts had an IRR of 2.59 (95% CI, 2.35-2.85), ie, not significantly different from 2 contacts (P ≥.99) (Figure, A). Moreover, a higher suicide frequency was noted relative to increasing number of days in treatment for TBI (test for trend, P < .001). As seen in Figure, B, the IRR for individuals hospitalized at least 1 day was 1.78 (95% CI, 1.69-1.88), whereas IRRs of more than 2 were noted for those whose treatment had lasted at least 3 days compared with individuals with no medical contact for TBI (see eTable 4 in the Supplement). Temporal proximity since last medical contact for TBI was associated with risk of suicide (test for trend, P < .001), with an IRR of 3.67 (95% CI, 3.33-4.04) the first 6 months and 1.76 (95% CI, 1.67-1.86) after 7 years compared with the background population. The risk of suicide with in the first 6 months after the TBI incident was also significantly higher (test of between group difference IRR, 2.10 (95% CI, 1.89-2.34; P < .001) compared with more than 7 years after a TBI.

Figure. Incidence of Suicide Among Denmark Residents After Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), 1980-2014a.

Figure.

aSee eTable 2 for complete data estimates. Error bars indicate 95% CIs.

bAdjusted for sex, age, and calendar period, educational level, cohabitation status, marital status, socioeconomic status, fractures not involving the skull or the spine, epilepsy, Charlson comorbidity index, and psychiatric illness prior to traumatic brain injury (TBI) and prior to TBI-deliberate self-harm. Less than 1 day indicates same-day discharge.

cAdjusted for all characteristics listed in footnote b except fractures not involving the skull or the spine.

In Figure, D, the results presented were not adjusted for non–CNS-related fractures, and it shows that those with TBI had an IRR of 2.00 (95% CI, 1.93-2.08; P < .001) for suicide after a medical contact for TBI but also that those with fractures not involving the skull or spine had a higher rate of suicide with an IRR of 1.15 (95% CI, 1.12-1.19) than did the background population. Compared with individuals with a non–CNS-related fracture, those with a TBI had a significantly higher risk of suicide (IRR, 1.73; 95% CI, 1.66-1.81; P < .001).

The fully adjusted analyses showed that suicide rates were significantly elevated for all age groups of first TBI compared with individuals without TBI (Table 3). Those who had a first medical contact and were between the ages of 16 and 20 years had the highest suicide risk (IRR, 3.01; 95% CI, 2.74-3.30) compared with individuals with no TBI and also were at significantly higher risk of suicide than those experiencing TBI in all other age-groups (test of between group difference IRR, 1.65; 95% CI, 1.50-1.82; P < .001).

Table 3. Number of Suicides Associated With Age at First Medical Contact for Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI).

No. of Individuals With No Medical Contact for TBI Age at First Medical Contact for TBI, y
0-10 11-15 16-20 21-40 41-60 ≥61
No. of suicides 30 993 170 169 468 1482 854 393
Individuals 6 850 568 106 737 56 279 69 925 141 149 93 615 100 118
Person-years 155 547 816 1 787 170 1 123 237 1 347 030 2 483 594 1 280 048 696 731
Suicide rate per 100 000 person-years (95% CI)
Age-standardized reference-group of no TBIa 16.9 (16.6-17.1) 16.9 (16.6-17.1) 16.9 (16.6-17.1) 22.0 (21.7-22.2) 27.0 (26.7-27.4) 29.1 (28.6-29.6)
Age of first TBI categoriesa 19.8 (19.5-20.1) 17.5 (17.2-17.7) 18.8 (18.5-19.0) 52.6 (52.2-53.0) 65.6 (65.0-66.1) 69.4 (68.5-70.2)
Rate difference per 100 000 person-years (95% CI) 1 [Reference] 2.9 (2.6-3.3) 0.6 (0.3-0.9) 1.9 (1.6-2.2) 30.7 (30.2-31.1) 38.6 (37.9-39.2) 40.3 (39.3-41.3)
Incidence rate ratio (95% CI) after adjustmentb 1 [Reference] 1.61 (1.38-1.88)c 1.88 (1.62-2.20)c 3.01 (2.74-3.30)c 2.21 (2.10-2.34)c 1.56 (1.46-1.68)c 1.37 (1.24-1.51)c
a

Age-standardized suicide rates.

b

Adjusted for sex, age, calendar period, educational level, cohabitation status, marital status, socioeconomic status, fractures not involving the skull or the spine, epilepsy, Charlson comorbidity index, pretraumatic brain injury psychiatric diagnosis, and pretraumatic brain injury deliberate self-harm.

c

P < .001 after adjustment for multiple comparisons.

Individuals who were diagnosed with a psychological illness after their TBI had a higher risk of suicide (IRR, 4.90; 95% CI, 4.55-5.29; P < .001) than did those with TBI only, as were those who had engaged in deliberate self-harm after experiencing their TBI (IRR, 7.54; 95% CI, 6.91-8.22; P < .001; Table 4). Likewise, individuals who had been diagnosed with a psychological illness before their TBI had a higher risk of suicide (IRR, 2.32; 95% CI, 2.10-2.55; P < .001) than did those with TBI only, as were those who had engaged in deliberate self-harm before experiencing their TBI (IRR, 2.85; 95% CI, 2.53-3.19; P < .001). Analyses of interaction showed a negative association between TBI and prior psychiatric diagnosis or prior deliberate self-harm, thus among individuals who had both preexisting psychological illnesses or had engaged in self-harm prior to their experiencing a TBI were at lower risk of suicide than those who had psychological illness or had engaged in deliberate self-harm but who did not experience a TBI (P < .001 for interaction terms; eTable 2 and eTable 3 in the Supplement).

Table 4. Suicide Rates Ratios According to Timing of First Psychiatric Diagnosis and Deliberate Self-Harming With a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Diagnosis.

Individuals With TBI Individuals With TBI, but No Pre-TBI Psychiatric Diagnosis or Pre-TBI Deliberate Self-Harm
Pre-TBI Psychiatric Diagnosis Pre-TBI Deliberate Self-harm Post-TBI Psychiatric Diagnosis Post-TBI Deliberate Self-Harm
No Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes
No. of suicides 2693 843 3066 470 1630 1063 2257 809
Individuals 520 418 47 405 552 882 14 941 447 914 72 504 534 721 18 161
Person-years 8 219 175 498 634 8 534 233 183 576 7 482 034 737 141 8 272 011 262 222
Rate per 100 000 Person-Years
Suicide 32.8 (31.5-34.0) 169.1 (157.6-180.5) 35.9 (34.7-37.2) 256.0 (232.9-279.2) 21.8 (20.7-22.8) 144.2 (135.5-152.9) 27.3 (26.2-28.4) 308.5 (287.3-329.8)
Difference 1 [Reference] 136.3 (124.8-147.8) 1 [Reference] 220.1 (196.9-243.3) 1 [Reference] 122.4 (113.6-131.2) 1 [Reference] 281.2 (259.9-302.5)
Incidence Rate Ratio Variable Adjustment
Basic modela 1 [Reference] 4.92 (4.55-5.33)b 1 [Reference] 7.51 (6.81-8.28)b 1 [Reference] 7.22 (6.68-7.80)b 1 [Reference] 11.50 (10.6-12.5)b
Fully adjustedc,d,e 1 [Reference] 2.32 (2.10-2.55)b 1 [Reference] 2.85 (2.53-3.19)b 1 [Reference] 4.90 (4.55-5.29)b 1 [Reference] 7.54 (6.91-8.22)b
a

Adjusted for sex, age, and calendar period.

b

P < .001 after adjustment for multiple comparisons.

c

Adjusted for sex, age, calendar period, educational level, cohabitation status, socioeconomic status, marital status, fractures not involving the skull or the spine, epilepsy, and Charlson comorbidity index.

d

Analysis in which the psychiatric diagnosis is the dependent variable is also adjusted for deliberate self-harm.

e

Analysis in which deliberate self-harm is the dependent variable is also adjusted for psychiatric diagnosis.

The sensitivity analyses including only individuals with full register follow-up born after 1962 supported the overall association between TBI and suicide in the younger population, with a slightly higher association between TBI and suicide (IRR, 2.42; 95% CI, 2.25-2.59; eTable 5 in the Supplement). The association between TBI and suicide in analyses excluding individuals who received a TBI diagnosis as a result of a deliberate self-harm episode yielded an IRR of 1.88 (95% CI, 1.81-1.95).

Discussion

In this registry-based, retrospective, cohort study involving all Denmark residents, those with medical contact for TBI compared with the general population without TBI had an increased risk of suicide. Additional analyses revealed that the risk of suicide was higher for individuals with severe TBI, numerous medical contacts, and longer hospital stays. Analysis further showed that these individuals were at highest risk in the first 6 months after discharge. The association between TBI and suicide is likely to be partly mediated by post-TBI psychiatric symptoms because the risk of suicide among those who developed a psychiatric diagnosis or engaged in deliberate self-harm after a TBI diagnosis was higher than among individuals with only a TBI diagnosis. Traumatic brain injury constitutes a major public health problem with many serious consequences; furthermore, medical contact due to TBI had occurred prior to 10.2% of suicides. The absolute suicide rate in Denmark was 21 per 100 000 person-years in the 1980-2014 period, but it was almost twice as high among individuals with TBI, 41 per 100 000 person-years.

This study reports a lower difference between those with TBI and the general population than what has been reported in other studies, which in most cases have described this relative difference (although expressed as odds ratios, hazard rates, or in SMRs) to be somewhat higher than 2-fold.2,10,11,13,14,15 Some of the previously reported estimates were only adjusted for sex and age, although a few were also adjusted for race, income, or marital status, and these resemble the basic adjusted findings in this study (Table 2), for which an incidence RR of 2.64 (95% CI, 2.55-2.74) was obtained. Only 2 previous studies11,12 have reported estimates that were adjusted for pre-TBI psychiatric diagnoses; however, both studies were based on selected subgroups, ie, children11 and military veterans (90% male population)12 and were limited by small numbers of TBI-related suicide cases. As such no other studies, to our knowledge, have previously provided adjusted estimates for important confounders, such as pre-TBI psychiatric diagnosis, epilepsy, other fractures, a range of somatic comorbidity, and pre-TBI deliberate self-harm, which decreases the association between TBI and suicide. Still, a significantly higher suicide rate after medical contact for TBI was found. Furthermore, some findings in our study affirmed those reported in previous studies, such as suicide risk being associated with the number of medical contacts for TBI,6,9 an increased rate with increased TBI severity,2 and a higher suicide rate among individuals who experience a first TBI in young adulthood.2,11 Moreover, the risk of suicide was substantially higher after TBI than after non–CNS-related fractures, indicating that the association between TBI and suicide was not merely due to injury proneness. Furthermore, the interaction analyses indicating that in individuals with a pre-TBI history of either a psychiatric diagnosis or an engagement of deliberate self-harm, a TBI was associated with a lower risk of suicide than among those who only had a psychiatric diagnosis or engaged in deliberate self-harm. This seems paradoxical and might be due to increased medical attention after the TBI or possible TBI induced initiative apathy among those who in addition to a psychiatric history or deliberate self-harm experience a TBI, reducing suicide events that otherwise would have occurred.

Traumatic brain injury is a major public health problem that has many serious consequences, including suicide. The high prevalence of TBI globally emphasizes the importance for preventing TBI in order to ameliorate its sequelae, such as increased suicide risk, which can be prevented resulting in saved lives. Falls or road traffic accidents30 account for the largest share of TBIs. Helmet use has a protective effect, especially falls related to bicycling31,32 and falls that occur at work.33

This study has several strengths. First, this is a large-scale cohort study that included 7 418 391 individuals, 34 529 suicides, and 35 years of follow-up. It compared individual-level data in the analyses that were adjusted for time-varying important and well-known risk factors of suicide. Second, it included only suicide death as an outcome, not including uncertain deaths like in other previous studies,15 and classification of suicide in the Danish Cause of Death Register has recently been found to be very reliable.34

Limitations

This study also has several limitations. First, before 1995 medical outpatient contacts were not registered; thus, mild TBI incidents were treated in medical outpatient settings before 1995 and were not counted as individuals with TBIs, which may bias the estimates in a conservative direction. Second, no information on what treatment patients with TBIs received was available, which would have been useful to estimate whether different treatment regimens or subsequent follow-up would have reduced the suicide risk. Third, this study analyzed the number of medical contacts without further distinction among the 3 subtypes of medical encounter (hospitalization, emergency department, or outpatient); however, we evaluated the days in treatment as a measure of severity. Fourth, some individuals may not seek medical treatment after experiencing a mild TBI or for mild psychiatric disorders or for deliberate self-harm, consequently this would be unregistered and result in misclassification that bias estimates. Nevertheless, the risk of suicide was more increased after severe TBI than after mild TBI and also increased with the severity of the TBI when measured by the length of hospitalization for TBI, which might be a more accurate measure of TBI severity. Fifth, the National Patient Register has registered inpatient contacts since 1977; therefore, some individuals may have entered the study cohort with a pre-1977 incident of TBI, which may result in an underestimation of the risk estimate particularly in the elderly. Nevertheless, sensitivity analyses including only individuals with lifetime full registry data follow-up support the overall results.

Conclusions

In this nationwide registry-based retrospective cohort study, individuals with medical contact for TBI, compared with the general population without TBI, had an increased risk of suicide.

Supplement.

eTable 1. Diagnosis codes of exposures and outcomes based on International Classification Diseases Codes (ICD-codes)

eTable 2. Number of suicides, person-years, individuals, absolute suicide rates, rate differences and suicide incidence rate ratios (IRR) including result of interaction testing according to diagnostic subgroups of traumatic brain injury and pre-TBI psychiatric diagnosis

eTable 3. Number of suicides, person-years, individuals, absolute suicide rates, rate differences and suicide incidence rate ratios (IRR) including result of interaction testing according to diagnostic subgroups of traumatic brain injury and pre-TBI deliberate self-harm

eTable 4. Number of suicides, person-years, suicide incidence rate and suicide incidence rate ratios (IRR) by number of TBI's, days in treatment and time since last TBI

eTable 5. Number of suicides, person-years, suicide incidence rate and suicide incidence rate ratios (IRR) in individuals born after 1962

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

Supplement.

eTable 1. Diagnosis codes of exposures and outcomes based on International Classification Diseases Codes (ICD-codes)

eTable 2. Number of suicides, person-years, individuals, absolute suicide rates, rate differences and suicide incidence rate ratios (IRR) including result of interaction testing according to diagnostic subgroups of traumatic brain injury and pre-TBI psychiatric diagnosis

eTable 3. Number of suicides, person-years, individuals, absolute suicide rates, rate differences and suicide incidence rate ratios (IRR) including result of interaction testing according to diagnostic subgroups of traumatic brain injury and pre-TBI deliberate self-harm

eTable 4. Number of suicides, person-years, suicide incidence rate and suicide incidence rate ratios (IRR) by number of TBI's, days in treatment and time since last TBI

eTable 5. Number of suicides, person-years, suicide incidence rate and suicide incidence rate ratios (IRR) in individuals born after 1962


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