Objective: To
identify reliable predictors of outcome in comatose patients after
cardiac arrest using a single routine EEG and standardized
interpretation according to the terminology
proposed by the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society.
Methods: In this
cohort study, 4 EEG specialists, blinded to outcome, evaluated
prospectively recorded EEGs in the Target Temperature
Management trial (TTM trial) that randomized
patients to 33°C vs 36°C. Routine EEG was performed in patients still
comatose
after rewarming. EEGs were classified into
highly malignant (suppression, suppression with periodic discharges,
burst-suppression),
malignant (periodic or rhythmic patterns,
pathological or nonreactive background), and benign EEG (absence of
malignant features).
Poor outcome was defined as best Cerebral
Performance Category score 3–5 until 180 days.
Results: Eight TTM
sites randomized 202 patients. EEGs were recorded in 103 patients at a
median 77 hours after cardiac arrest; 37%
had a highly malignant EEG and all had a poor
outcome (specificity 100%, sensitivity 50%). Any malignant EEG feature
had a
low specificity to predict poor prognosis (48%)
but if 2 malignant EEG features were present specificity increased to
96%
(p < 0.001). Specificity and sensitivity were not significantly affected by targeted temperature or sedation. A benign EEG was
found in 1% of the patients with a poor outcome.
Conclusions: Highly
malignant EEG after rewarming reliably predicted poor outcome in half of
patients without false predictions. An isolated
finding of a single malignant feature did not
predict poor outcome whereas a benign EEG was highly predictive of a
good outcome.
Neurology 2016
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