Preliminary Prognostication for Good Neurological Outcomes in the Early Stage of Post-Cardiac Arrest Care

Author:

Lee Sunghyuk1,Park Jung Soo12ORCID,You Yeonho1,Min Jin Hong23,Jeong Wonjoon12ORCID,Ahn Hong Joon12,In Yong Nam23,Cho Yong Chul1,Lee In Ho45ORCID,Lee Jae Kwang6,Kang Changshin12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Chungnam National University Hospital, 282 Munhwa-ro, Jung-gu, Daejeon 35015, Republic of Korea

2. Department of Emergency Medicine, College of Medicine, Chungnam National University, 282 Mokdong-ro, Jung-gu, Daejeon 35015, Republic of Korea

3. Department of Emergency Medicine, Chungnam National University Sejong Hospital, 20, Bodeum 7-ro, Sejong 30099, Republic of Korea

4. Department of Radiology, Chungnam National University Hospital, 282 Munhwa-ro, Jung-gu, Daejeon 35015, Republic of Korea

5. Department of Radiology, College of Medicine, Chungnam National University, 282 Mokdong-ro, Jung-gu, Daejeon 35015, Republic of Korea

6. Department of Emergency Medicine, Konyang University Hospital, College of Medicine, Daejeon 35365, Republic of Korea

Abstract

We investigated prognostic strategies for predicting good outcomes in the early stage of post-cardiac-arrest care using multiple prognostic tests that are available until 24 h after the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). A retrospective analysis was conducted on 138 out-of-hospital cardiac-arrest patients who underwent prognostic tests, including the gray–white-matter ratio (GWR-BG), the Glasgow Coma Scale motor (GCS-M) score before sedative administration, and the neuron-specific enolase (NSE) level measured at 24 h after the ROSC. We investigated the prognostic performances of the tests as single predictors and in various combination strategies. Classification and regression-tree analysis were used to provide a reliable model for the risk stratification. Out of all the patients, 55 (44.0%) had good outcomes. The NSE level showed the highest prognostic performance as a single prognostic test and provided improved specificities (>70%) and sensitivities (>98%) when used in combination strategies. Low NSE levels (≤32.1 ng/mL) and high GCS-M (≥4) scores identified good outcomes without misclassification. The overall accuracy for good outcomes was 81.8%. In comatose patients with low NSE levels or high GCS-M scores, the premature withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy should be avoided, thereby complying with the formal prognostication-strategy algorithm after at least 72 h from the ROSC.

Funder

Korean Society of Emergency Medicine

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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