Aim: To assess if the amplitude of the N20 wave (N20Amp) of somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) changes between 12–24 h and 72 h from the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) after cardiac arrest and if an N20Amp decrease predicts poor neurological outcome (CPC 3–5) at six months. Setting: Retrospective analysis of the ProNeCA multicentre prognostication study dataset. (NCT03849911). Methods: In adult comatose cardiac arrest survivors whose SSEPs were recorded at both 12–24 h and 72 h after ROSC, we measured the median N20Amp at each timepoint and the individual change in N20Amp across the two timepoints. We identified their cutoffs for predicting poor outcome with 0% false positive rate (FPR) and compared their sensitivities. Results: We included 236 patients. The median [IQR] N20Amp increased from 1.90 [0.78–4.22] µV to 2.86 [1.52–5.10] µV between 12–24 h and 72 h (p = 0.0019). The N20Amp cutoff for 0% FPR increased from 0.6 µV at 12–24 h to 1.23 µV at 72 h, and its sensitivity increased from 56[48–64]% to 71[63–77]%. Between 12–24 h and 72 h, an N20Amp decrease > 53% predicted poor outcome with 0[0–5]% FPR and 26[19–35]% sensitivity. Its combination with an N20Amp < 1.23 µV at 72 h increased sensitivity by 1% to 72[64–79]%. Conclusion: In comatose cardiac arrest survivors, the median N20Amp and its cutoff for predicting poor neurological outcome increase between 12–24 and 72 h after ROSC. An N20Amp decrease greater than 53% between these two timepoints predicts poor outcome with 0% FPR, confirming the unfavourable prognostic signal of a low N20Amp at 72 h.

Scarpino, M., Lolli, F., Lanzo, G., Carrai, R., Spalletti, M., Valzania, F., Lombardi, M., Audenino, D., Contardi, S., Grazia Celani, M., Marrelli, A., Mecarelli, O., Minardi, C., Minicucci, F., Politini, L., Vitelli, E., Peris, A., Amantini, A., Grippo, A., Sandroni, C., Do changes in SSEP amplitude over time predict the outcome of comatose survivors of cardiac arrest?, <<RESUSCITATION>>, 2022; 181 (12): 133-139. [doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2022.10.025] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/234522]

Do changes in SSEP amplitude over time predict the outcome of comatose survivors of cardiac arrest?

Grippo, Antonello
Conceptualization
;
Sandroni, Claudio
Ultimo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
2022

Abstract

Aim: To assess if the amplitude of the N20 wave (N20Amp) of somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) changes between 12–24 h and 72 h from the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) after cardiac arrest and if an N20Amp decrease predicts poor neurological outcome (CPC 3–5) at six months. Setting: Retrospective analysis of the ProNeCA multicentre prognostication study dataset. (NCT03849911). Methods: In adult comatose cardiac arrest survivors whose SSEPs were recorded at both 12–24 h and 72 h after ROSC, we measured the median N20Amp at each timepoint and the individual change in N20Amp across the two timepoints. We identified their cutoffs for predicting poor outcome with 0% false positive rate (FPR) and compared their sensitivities. Results: We included 236 patients. The median [IQR] N20Amp increased from 1.90 [0.78–4.22] µV to 2.86 [1.52–5.10] µV between 12–24 h and 72 h (p = 0.0019). The N20Amp cutoff for 0% FPR increased from 0.6 µV at 12–24 h to 1.23 µV at 72 h, and its sensitivity increased from 56[48–64]% to 71[63–77]%. Between 12–24 h and 72 h, an N20Amp decrease > 53% predicted poor outcome with 0[0–5]% FPR and 26[19–35]% sensitivity. Its combination with an N20Amp < 1.23 µV at 72 h increased sensitivity by 1% to 72[64–79]%. Conclusion: In comatose cardiac arrest survivors, the median N20Amp and its cutoff for predicting poor neurological outcome increase between 12–24 and 72 h after ROSC. An N20Amp decrease greater than 53% between these two timepoints predicts poor outcome with 0% FPR, confirming the unfavourable prognostic signal of a low N20Amp at 72 h.
2022
Inglese
Scarpino, M., Lolli, F., Lanzo, G., Carrai, R., Spalletti, M., Valzania, F., Lombardi, M., Audenino, D., Contardi, S., Grazia Celani, M., Marrelli, A., Mecarelli, O., Minardi, C., Minicucci, F., Politini, L., Vitelli, E., Peris, A., Amantini, A., Grippo, A., Sandroni, C., Do changes in SSEP amplitude over time predict the outcome of comatose survivors of cardiac arrest?, <<RESUSCITATION>>, 2022; 181 (12): 133-139. [doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2022.10.025] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/234522]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/234522
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