Abstract
Research on prognostic factors for good outcomes in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) survivors is lacking. We assessed whether normal levels of normal neuron-specific enolase (NSE) value would be useful for predicting good neurological outcomes in comatose OHCA survivors treated with targeted temperature management (TTM). This registry-based observational study with consecutive adult (≥18 years) OHCA survivors with TTM who underwent NSE measurement 48 hours after cardiac arrest was conducted from October 2015 to November 2022. Normal NSE values defined as the upper limit of the normal range by the manufacturer (NSE <16.3 μg/L) and guideline-suggested (NSE < 60 μg/L) were examined for good neurologic outcomes, defined as Cerebral Performance Categories ≤2, at 6 months post-survival. Among 226 OHCA survivors with TTM, 200 patients who underwent NSE measurement were enrolled. The manufacturer-suggested normal NSE values (<16.3 μg/L) had a specificity of 99.17% for good neurological outcomes with a very low sensitivity of 12.66%. NSE <60 μg/L predicted good outcomes with a sensitivity of 87.34% and specificity of 72.73%. However, excluding 14 poor-outcome patients who died from multi-organ dysfunction excluding hypoxic brain injury, the sensitivity and specificity of normal NSE values were 12.66% and 99.07% of NSE < 16.3 μg/L, and 87.34% and 82.24% of NSE < 60 μg/L. The manufacturer-suggested normal NSE had high specificity with low sensitivity, but the guideline-suggested normal NSE value had a comparatively low specificity for good outcome prediction in OHCA survivors. Our data demonstrate normal NSE levels can be useful as a tool for multimodal appropriation of good outcome prediction.
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