4.5 Article

NSE as a predictor of death or poor neurological outcome after non-shockable cardiac arrest due to any cause: Ancillary study of HYPERION trial data

Journal

RESUSCITATION
Volume 158, Issue -, Pages 193-200

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2020.11.035

Keywords

Brain ischaemia/enzymology; Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest/complications; Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest/mortality; Biomarkers/blood; Hypothermia; Induced; Multicentre study; Prospective studies

Funding

  1. District Hospital Centre, La Roche Sur Yon, France
  2. Laerdal Fondation, Stavenger, Norway

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This study from a multicenter trial found that in non-shockable rhythm patients resuscitated after cardiac arrest, NSE levels at 72 hours are associated with neurological outcomes at 90 days. NSE levels predicted neurological outcomes at 48 and 72 hours.
Purpose: Prognostication of hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury after resuscitation from cardiac arrest is based on a multimodal approach including biomarker assays. Our goal was to assess whether plasma NSE helps to predict day-90 death or poor neurological outcome in patients resuscitated from cardiac arrest in non-shockable rhythm. Methods: All included patients participated in the randomised multicentre HYPERION trial. Serum blood samples were taken 24, 48, and 72 h after randomisation; pre-treated, aliquoted, and frozen at -80 degrees C at the study sites; and shipped to a central biology laboratory, where the NSE assays were performed. Primary outcome was neurological status at day 90 assessed by Cerebral Performance Category (1 or 2 versus. 3, 4 or 5). Results: NSE was assayed in 235 assessable blood samples from 101 patients. In patients with good versus poor outcomes, median NSE values at 24, 48, and 72 h were 22.6 [95%CI, 14.6;27.3] ng/mL versus 33.6 [20.5;90.0] ng/mL (p < 0.04), 18.1 [11.7;29.7] ng/mL versus 76.8 [21.5;206.6] ng/mL (p < 0.0029), and 9 [6.1;18.6] ng/mL versus 80.5 [22.9;236.1] ng/mL (p < 0.001), respectively. NSE at 48 and 72 h predicted the neurological outcome with areas under the receiver-operating curve of 0.79 [95%CI, 0.69;0.96] and 0.9 [0.81;0.96], respectively. NSE levels did not differ significantly between the groups managed at 33 degrees C and 37 degrees C (p = 0.59). Conclusions: Data from a multicentre trial on cardiac arrest with a non-shockable rhythm due to any cause confirm that NSE values at 72 h are associated with 90-day outcome. NSE levels did not differ significantly according to the targeted temperature. Registration Identifier: ClinicalTrial NCT02722473.

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