Early risk stratification for progression to death by neurological criteria following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest

被引:7
|
作者
Coppler, Patrick J. [1 ]
Flickinger, Katharyn L. [1 ]
Darby, Joseph M. [2 ]
Doshi, Ankur [1 ]
Guyette, Francis X. [1 ]
Faro, John [3 ]
Callaway, Clifton W. [1 ]
Elmer, Jonathan [1 ,2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Emergency Med, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[2] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Crit Care Med, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[3] Kettering Hlth Network, Soin Med Ctr, Dept Family Med, Beavercreek, OH USA
[4] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Neurol, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA
关键词
Cardiac arrest; Anoxic brain injury; Brain death; Heart arrest; Imaging; Electroencephalography; BRAIN-DEATH; TEMPERATURE MANAGEMENT; SUPPRESSION RATIO; ORGAN DONATION; CEREBRAL EDEMA; RESUSCITATION; OUTCOMES; GUIDELINES; CARE; CT;
D O I
10.1016/j.resuscitation.2022.07.029
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Background: Some patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) progress to death by neurological criteria (DNC). We hypothesized that initial brain imaging, electroencephalography (EEG), and arrest characteristics predict progression to DNC.Methods: We identified comatose OHCA patients from January 2010 to February 2020 treated at a single quaternary care facility in Western Pennsylvania. We abstracted demographics and arrest characteristics; Pittsburgh Cardiac Arrest Category, initial motor exam and pupillary light reflex; initial brain computed tomography (CT) grey-to-white ratio (GWR), sulcal or basal cistern effacement; initial EEG background and suppression ratio. We used two modeling approaches: fast and frugal tree (FFT) analysis to create an interpretable clinical risk stratification tool and ridge regression for comparison. We used bootstrapping to randomly partition cases into 80% training and 20% test sets and evaluated test set sensitivity and specificity.Results: We included 1,569 patients, of whom 147 (9%) had diagnosed DNC. Across bootstrap samples, >99% of FFTs included three predictors: sulcal effacement, and in cases without sulcal effacement, the combination of EEG background suppression and GWR < 1.23. This tree had mean sensitivity and specificity of 87% and 81%. Ridge regression with all available predictors had mean sensitivity 91% and mean specificity 83%. Subjects falsely predicted as likely to progress to DNC generally died of rearrest or withdrawal of life sustaining therapies due to poor neurological prognosis. Two of these cases awakened from coma during the index hospitalization.Conclusions: Sulcal effacement on presenting brain CT or EEG suppression with GWR < 1.23 predict progression to DNC after OHCA.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:248 / 255
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Prehospital risk stratification following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
    Y Goto
    T Maeda
    Y Goto
    Critical Care, 17 (Suppl 2):
  • [2] EARLY PREDICTION OF SURVIVAL WITH PRESERVED NEUROLOGICAL FUNCTION FOLLOWING OUT-OF-HOSPITAL CARDIAC ARREST
    Caprio, Brendan
    Chen, Ling
    Brown, David L.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2020, 75 (11) : 360 - 360
  • [4] Risk factors for progression toward brain death after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
    Martin Cour
    Jean Turc
    Thomas Madelaine
    Laurent Argaud
    Annals of Intensive Care, 9
  • [5] Risk factors for progression toward brain death after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
    Cour, Martin
    Turc, Jean
    Madelaine, Thomas
    Argaud, Laurent
    ANNALS OF INTENSIVE CARE, 2019, 9 (1)
  • [6] Reasons for Death Following In- and Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest
    Witten, Lise
    Gardner, Ryan
    Holmberg, Mathias J.
    Wiberg, Sebastian
    Moskowitz, Ari
    Michael, W.
    Berg, Katherine M.
    CIRCULATION, 2018, 138
  • [7] Neurological Recovery Following Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest: Role of Hypothermia
    Yu, I-Chen
    Schleinkofer, Nathan
    Maeng, Joo-Young
    Chen, Yu-Chieh
    Doshi, Riddhi
    Plant, Robert
    Mirro, Michael
    Chang, Fen-Lei
    STROKE, 2015, 46
  • [8] The CAHP (Cardiac Arrest Hospital Prognosis) score: a tool for risk stratification after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
    Maupain, Carole
    Bougouin, Wulfran
    Lamhaut, Lionel
    Deye, Nicolas
    Diehl, Jean-Luc
    Geri, Guillaume
    Perier, Marie-Cecile
    Beganton, Frankie
    Marijon, Eloi
    Jouven, Xavier
    Cariou, Alain
    Dumas, Florence
    EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL, 2016, 37 (42) : 3222 - 3228
  • [9] Predictors of early care withdrawal following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
    Albaeni, Aiham
    Chandra-Strobos, Nisha
    Vaidya, Dhananjay
    Eid, Shaker M.
    RESUSCITATION, 2014, 85 (11) : 1455 - 1461
  • [10] Favourable neurological outcome following paediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: authors' reply
    Fuchs, Alexander
    Albrecht, Roland
    Greif, Robert
    Mueller, Martin
    Pietsch, Urs
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF TRAUMA RESUSCITATION & EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2024, 32 (01):