Abstract

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): Consell Català de Resucitació 2022. Background Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) accounts the 50% of cardiovascular deaths. Neuroprognostication must be done in a multimodal approach as recommended by ILCOR guidelines but its application in real life is challenging. Aim To investigate current post-resuscitation care and neurological prognostication of OHCA patients admitted to a mediterranean Intensive Cardiac Care Unit (ICCU) during the 2020s. Methods PCR-Cat was a prospective observational multicenter registry. OHCA patients admitted to the ICCU of 8 catalan hospitals were included from October/2020 to December/2021. Post-OHCA management in the ICCU was analyzed including neuroprognostication tools and targeted temperature management (TTM) approach. Patients were classified into 2 groups according to main outcome at 6-month follow-up: good (CPC 1-2, GO) or poor outcome (death or CPC 3-4, PO). Results 288 patients were included, mean age 61.45 ± 13.76 and only 17.36% were female. GO at 6-month follow-up occurred in 48.95% of patients. Total medium time until ROSC was 28 min and first rhythm was shockable in 80%. An emergent coronary angiography was done in 68.9% and during any moment of the hospitalization in 83.5% (PCI 56.5%). There was no association between the presence and type of significant coronary artery disease and the main outcome. TTM was applied in 65.33% and the target temperature was 33ºC in 71.76%, 34ºC in 3.53%, 35ºC in 2.35% and 36ºC in 22.35%, with no statistically significant differences between the GO and PO groups. The neuronal specific enolase (NSE) was determined in 57 % of patients at 24 hours, 45% at 48h and 57% at 72 h. Myoclonus were statistically significant more frequent in patients with PO (51.20% vs. 7.52%, p<0.001). Almost one electroencephalogram was performed in 60.4% of patients, somato-sensorial evoked potentials in 53.01%, a cerebral computed tomography in 57.75% and a cerebral magnetic resonance imaging in 19.38%. As expected, an abnormal result of all those neurological tests, when performed, were related to poor outcome (Table 1). In-hospital mortality was 46%. Main cause of death was neurological in 72.90%. The percentage of CPC 1-2 increased throughout the follow-up period (Figure 1). Conclusions Although ILCOR guidelines clearly indicate the use of a multimodal approach for neuroprognostication, in real-life setting, the conventional tests for neurological evaluation are used in a differently in every center, depending on their expertise and facility of resources.Figure 1

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