Validation of neuron-specific enolase in cardiac arrest patients with limited withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy.
Heliyon
; 10(14): e34618, 2024 Jul 30.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39113971
ABSTRACT
Aim:
We validated the prognostic performance of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) according to the recommended values in cardiac arrest (CA) survivors.Methods:
We analyzed the data of adult CA survivors who underwent targeted temperature management between January 2014 and December 2020. We measured the NSE level 48 h and 72 h after CA. We performed receiver operating characteristics (ROC) and used the reference value (17 µg/L) and the guidelines-suggested value (60 µg/L) as thresholds. The primary outcome was 6-month neurological outcomes with Cerebral Performance Category (CPC), dichotomized into good (CPC 1 or 2) or poor (CPC 3-5).Results:
Of the 513 included patients, 346 (67.4 %) patients had poor neurological outcomes. The area under ROC (AUC) of NSE at 48 h was 0.887 (95 % confidence intervals [CIs], 0.851-0.909) with the Youden index of 35.6 µg/L. A false positive rate (FPR) of <2 % was observed (54.1 µg/L). The thresholds values (17, 60) had a sensitivity of 86.1% and 56.7 % and a specificity of 66.7%and 98.8 %, respectively. The AUC of NSE at 72 h was 0.892 (95 % CIs, 0.849-0.920) with the Youden index of 30.4 µg/L. The threshold values (17, 60) had a sensitivity of 86.0%and 59.4 % with a specificity of 72.2%and 98.3 %, respectively. An FPR of <2 % was observed (53.6 µg/L). Among the 156 patients and 113 patients with NSE at 48 h and at 72 h ≤ 17 µg/L, respectively, 109 and 83 patients had good neurological outcomes.Conclusions:
The cut-off value of NSE (60 µg/L) was acceptable to predict poor neurological outcomes with an FPR <2 % in cardiac arrest survivors, irrespective of at 48 or 72 h. NSE (17 µg/L) can function as mitigating factor to deter early WLST.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article