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EEG and SEP Evaluation for Good and Poor Neurological Prognosis After Cardiac Arrest

Completed
Conditions
Neurological Prognosis Cardiac Arrest
Registration Number
NCT03849911
Lead Sponsor
Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Careggi
Brief Summary

Hypoxic-Ischemic-encephalopathy (HIE) is a severe and frequent neurological complication of successful cardiopulmonary-resuscitation after cardiac arrest (CA). Prognosticating neurological outcomes in patients with HIE is challenging and recent guidelines suggest a multimodal approach. Only few studies have analyzed the prognostic power of the association between instrumental tests and, in addition, most of them were monocentric, retrospective and evaluating only poor outcome.

Detailed Description

Post-anoxic encephalopathy is a severe and frequent neurological complication of successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation and it is usually responsible for coma onset in patients surviving a CA. A reliable early assessment of the neurological prognosis is an important research goal because it could address CA patient management within intensive care units (ICUs).

However, prognosticating neurological outcomes in patients with HIE is challenging and recent guidelines suggest a multimodal approach. Only few studies have analyzed the prognostic power of the association between instrumental tests and, in addition, most of them were monocentric, retrospective and evaluating only poor outcome.

Thus, the investigators designed a multicenter prospective cohort study to assessing the prognostic power of the association of electroencephalogram(EEG) and somatosensory evoked potentials(SEPs) for the prediction of both poor and good neurological outcomes at different times after CA.

The principal aim of this study will be to evaluate the prognostic power of EEG performed in comatose patients within the first 12h after CA for good outcome prediction (cerebral performance categories CPC 1-2-3) and to evaluate its prognostic power for the poor outcome prediction (CPC 4-5) when performed at 24 and 72h after CA.

Moreover, the investigators will aim to evaluate if the combination of EEG and SEPs will allow to correctly identify a greater number of patients with both poor and good outcomes (when performed within the first 12h) and with poor outcomes (when performed after 72h) compared with the use of only a single test. In addition, the investigators will evaluate if the concordance of EEG/SEP patterns will increase the prognostic reliability obtained with a single test.

Finally, the investigators will aim to confirm if the prognostic power of the bilaterally absent(AA) SEP pattern for poor outcome prediction will be reliable at any time of recording after CA, and if other SEP pathological patterns will assume an analogous ominous prognostic significance.

ADDENDUM: after the conclusion of the enrollment we investigated the availability of brain CT data obtained within the first 24 hours after CA. In 7 over 13 centers, including the coordinator center (AOU Careggi, Florence) early brain CT data were available.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
400
Inclusion Criteria
  • male and female patients between 18 and 90 years of age and
  • comatose patients surviving after CA with a Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) <9
Exclusion Criteria
  • patients with surgical or traumatic causes of CA,
  • patients showing contemporary presence of other neurological diseases (i.e. traumatic brain injury or brain infarction),
  • patients with previous severe neurological diseases,
  • patients with remote pathological anamnesis showing severe diseases with life expectancy less than 6 months,
  • patients with previous severe disability,
  • contemporary presence of confounding factors that hamper clinical evaluation (in particular the consciousness state)
  • patients with contemporary absence of cortical response N20/P25 and lemniscal wave P14

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Cerebral Performance CategoriesMonth 6

Neurological outcome will be the primary outcome measure and it will be assessed at 6 months after CA using CPC as follows: CPC 1, no or minor neurological deficits; CPC 2, moderate disability; CPC 3, severe disability; CPC 4, unresponsive wakefulness state and CPC 5, death. Neurological outcome will be dichotomized into 'good' (CPC 1-3) and 'poor' (CPC 4-5) outcomes

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Electroencephalography, EEGhour: 12-24-72

American Clinical Neurophysiology Society (ACNS) EEG terminology

Somatosensory Evoked Potentials, SEPhour: 12-24-72

According to the cortical responses of each hemisphere

Brain CTwithin 24 hours

Caudate nucleus(CN), putamen(PU) and posterior limb of the internal capsule(PIC) were bilaterally identified as circular (0.6cm2) regions of interest(ROIs) where density measurement (Hounsfield Units-HU) were performed. At the corpus callosum(CC) level, the density value was considered the same bilaterally. The GM/WM ratio at basal ganglia level was calculated as follows: GM/WM ratio= (CN+PU)/(CC+PIC)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

AOU Careggi

🇮🇹

Firenze, Italy

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