The Province

STILL UP IN THE AIR

Convincing as it may sound, the news that researcher­s have found that 110 out of 111 brains of former NFL players testing positive for CTE still doesn’t prove there is a definite connection between head injuries and the devastatin­g disease. One Toronto ne

- JOHN KRYK

FOXBORO, Mass. — Scenario: Over the course of a few years, 111 kids at an amusement park are taken to first-aid, nearly all complainin­g of queasy stomachs. Paramedics diagnose 110 with nausea.

Conclusion: More than 99% of kids who ever go to an amusement park get nauseated. Right? Of course not. But this is the kind of unsupporte­d extrapolat­ion many have been making since Tuesday, when the latest study co-authored by a leading brain-disease researcher, Boston University’s Dr. Ann McKee, was released. She and 26 other medical researcher­s identified the neuro-degenerati­ve malady CTE (chronic traumatic encephalop­athy) posthumous­ly in 110 of the 111 donated brains of one-time National Football League players. More than 99%. “My hope is we’ll stop arguing about whether or not this is a problem, or whether or not it needs to be addressed,” said McKee, director of BU’s CTE Center.

The world’s foremost experts on traumatic brain injuries agree the matter needs to be addressed, and urgently. Internatio­nal experts just won’t go as far as to chainlink concussion­s to CTE.

After the fifth internatio­nal conference on concussion in sport last autumn, such experts reached the following consensus conclusion, released publicly in April, which stops far short of definitive­ly linking traumatic head hits to brain diseases: “There is still much to learn on the potential associatio­n between concussion/recurrent head trauma and long-term effects. There continues to be a need for additional research to fully understand the causeeffec­t relationsh­ip establishe­d between concussion and CTE.”

Does such a cause-effect relationsh­ip exist? If so, to what degree? And how prevalent is CTE in all retired NFL players? No researcher­s can say.

By her own admission, McKee has not yet studied a random sample of former football players, but rather a “convenienc­e sample” consisting primarily of only the donated brains of onetime players, nearly all of whom exhibited varying degrees of brain-disease symptoms before dying.

What about the brains of all those former NFL players who exhibited no such brain maladies in later life? Or brains randomly selected from the general population? What if the brains of those who never played football or any contact sports also exhibit seriously high levels of CTE? And to what degree, if any, did substance

abuse exacerbate CTE in the brains of those McKee and the others examined?

To ask these questions is not to undermine the excellent, ground-breaking work of McKee and her researcher­s this decade. And especially the work of her partner, Dr. Chris Nowinski, founder of the Concussion Legacy Foundation and co-founder of McKee’s brain bank, who for years has been the sharpest critic of feet-dragging pro sports leagues, as well as the loudest advocate for the wide implementa­tion of safer, more conservati­ve protocols for concussion diagnosis and return-to-play at all levels of contact sports.

Nowinski and McKee have undoubtedl­y saved lives and aided the concussion recoveries of countless athletes, because of their tireless advocacy in raising awareness of concussion­s and CTE in general. It’s just that not all experts in their field concur with all of their conclusion­s.

Dr. Lili-Naz Hazrati is a Toronto neuropatho­logist. She is an associate professor at University of Toronto, and works at both Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children and the Canadian Concussion Centre. She herself has examined dozens of brains of former profession­al athletes.

In a phone interview from Toronto, Hazrati told Postmedia on Wednesday night that she has not found nearly the high incidence of CTE as McKee and the others. What’s more, Hazrati said she’s troubled by the study’s lumping of brains showing miniscule traces of CTE (Stages 1 and 2) with much more severe Stage 3-4 cases, and that as a result of the shocking 99% prevalence figure, she is concerned media and the public are inferring an unsupporte­d conclusion that not only football, but all such contact sports, are extremely dangerous for all participan­ts.

“When you look at their numbers (in the study), quite a bit of their CTE diagnoses are just, like, that tiny little spot,” Hazrati said. “Stage 1 means that they’ve looked through the whole brain and have found one tiny little spot where there are a few cells positive with tau protein (a primary CTE marker). In that whole brain there are very limited amounts of tau, and in one small area.

“If they call that CTE, fine. But then they bunch it with the ones with more severe, advanced CTE, and they call the whole bunch CTE. It’s like counting burn patients but even including me, who has a little burn at the very tip of my finger, and also everyone who has been burned somehow even any little bit, and lumping us all in with the severely burned.”

Nowinski, one of the study’s authors, takes great exception to Hazrati’s comments on this particular issue.

“I think Dr. Hazrati is severely mischaract­erizing the study,” Nowinski said in an email to Postmedia. “Only 11 of 177 cases (6%) were Stage 1, so while a neuropatho­logist can complain that they think they have a better minimum criteria for diagnosis, it has no implicatio­n on the overall findings.

“A burn on the tip of your finger, which is an injury and does not turn into a progressiv­e disease, is a completely inappropri­ate analogy for early-stage CTE. Cancer is more accurate.”

In her own examinatio­ns of brains of deceased profession­al athletes, Hazrati said she has detected less prevalence of CTE, and less severe cases, than her American counterpar­t.

“What I’m seeing, in ballpark numbers, is 30% of our cases have some CTE pathology,” said Hazrati, who underscore­d that her research receives no funding of any kind from any profession­al sports body. “Most are basically very lowstage pathology. I’ve got CFL players, I’ve got hockey players and I’ve got brains from some other athletes — rugby players, wrestlers, boxers, sports like that. So it’s a mix. But they’re all profession­al athletes.

“We don’t see that volume of advanced cases that have been reported (by McKee). Only 30% of our brains have CTE. And about 30% don’t have anything.”

Bottom line, Hazrati said, is this: “None of these postmortem brain autopsies are going to solve the CTE (mystery), at all. You cannot solve the cause of CTE by looking at brains of deceased people.”

As yet, there is no way to detect CTE in the living.

“That first step is not solved yet — whether there’s a definitive link to concussion­s,” Hazrati said. “So how can you even think about who’s the most susceptibl­e? Who’s not? What age is the worst? Just looking at these brains (posthumous­ly), you cannot say any of that. It’s just impossible at this point.”

Hazrati isn’t the only internatio­nally respected neuro-scientist whose findings appear at odds with that of McKee and company.

For instance, Dr. William Stewart — a lead neuropatho­logist at a hospital in Glasgow, Scotland, with diagnostic and research specialtie­s in forensic neuropatho­logy (especially traumatic brain injuries) — co-authored a study published earlier this year that examined the long-term health outcomes of those who suffered repeated concussion­s in elite-level rugby, a sport arguably at least as dangerous as American football.

Researcher­s compared the cognitive function of 52 living, retired former male Scottish internatio­nal rugby players — who’d suffered an average of a whopping 14 concussion­s apiece — against 29 nonrugby players of similar age.

“There were no significan­t associatio­ns between number of concussion­s and performanc­e on cognitive tests,” the study found. What’s more, although “persisting symptoms attributed to concussion” were more common in rugby players who’d suffered more than nine concussion­s apiece, “these symptoms were not perceived to affect social or work functionin­g.”

The NFL issued this statement following the release of McKee’s report Tuesday: “We appreciate the work done by Dr. McKee and her colleagues for the value it adds in the ongoing quest for a better understand­ing of CTE. Case studies such as those compiled in this updated paper are important to further advancing the science and progress related to head trauma. The medical and scientific communitie­s will benefit from this publicatio­n and the NFL will continue to work with a wide range of experts to improve the health of current and former NFL athletes.

“As noted by the authors, there are still many unanswered questions relating to the cause, incidence and prevalence of long-term effects of head trauma such as CTE. The NFL is committed to supporting scientific research into CTE and advancing progress in the prevention and treatment of head injuries.”

Until researcher­s are able to study large, random samples of football players, including those without symptoms, as well as non-football players in the general population who were never concussed, it will be hard for any claims of widespread affliction­s to hold up to scrutiny.

Indeed, Hazrati said we should all be careful to read closely what studies have found, and not connect more dots than medical scientists have provided.

It might help, then, to bear in mind that analogy of nauseated kids at amusement parks.

“That describes it pretty well, yes,” Hazrati said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Carolina Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly (left) is carted off the field after sustaining a concussion against the New Orleans Saints last season.
GETTY IMAGES Carolina Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly (left) is carted off the field after sustaining a concussion against the New Orleans Saints last season.
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 ??  ?? Linebacker Junior Seau is one former NFL player whose brain tested positive for CTE. Seau killed himself in 2012.
Linebacker Junior Seau is one former NFL player whose brain tested positive for CTE. Seau killed himself in 2012.
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