Abstract
Introduction: Previous studies have shown that women have poorer neurological outcomes than men following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). However, those studies focused on survival, a measure that may be confounded by withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy (WLST) decisions. We sought to assess sex differences in severe cerebral edema development following cardiac arrest. Methods: Data from adult OHCA patients presenting between 2007-2019 were retrospectively analyzed. Patients with multiple concomitant acute neurologic dysfunctions were excluded. Severe cerebral edema was classified as herniation or more than minimal ventricular effacement in MRI or CT radiology reports. Arrest types were categorized as shockable (VT/VF) or non-shockable (PEA, asystole). Poor outcomes were defined as Cerebral Performance Category > 3 at discharge. Multivariable backward stepwise logistic regression was performed. Results: 359 patients met our inclusion criteria. Demographics, imaging and clinical outcomes are summarized in Table 1. Women were more likely than men to have a non-shockable initial rhythm (P=0.003) and develop severe cerebral edema (P=0.005). Backwards stepwise logistic regression of an initial model including age, sex, rhythm, witnessed arrest and TTM-treatment, produced a final model that showed younger age (P<0.001), female sex (P=0.01), and non-shockable rhythm (P<0.001) as significant predictors of severe cerebral edema development. Patients with severe cerebral edema had worse outcomes (89/91 vs 176/268, P<0.001), and greater in-hospital mortality (82/91 vs 166/268, P<0.001), with a higher proportion of deaths due to brain death (15/82 vs 3/166 P<0.001). Conclusion: For OHCA patients who are initially comatose, women are more likely than men to have non-shockable rhythms and severe cerebral brain edema. These differences may be responsible for the poorer discharge outcomes that have been observed by other studies.
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