Abstract

BackgroundAccurate predictors of neurological recovery after cervical spinal cord injury are needed. Particularly, to tailor adequate rehabilitation plans. However, objective and quantifiable predictors are sparse.MethodsWithin the prospective European Multicenter Study about Spinal Cord Injury (EMSCI) registry, cervical spinal cord injury patients are monitored at fixed follow up visits (2, 4, 12, 24, and 48 weeks after injury) clinically and with ulnar nerve electroneurography. Associations of ulnar nerve compound muscle action potential amplitudes (CMAP) with American Spinal Cord Injury Association (ASIA) impairment scale (AIS) grades over time were analyzed using linear mixed modeling. Applying logistic regression, the prognostic value of within 4-week ulnar nerve CMAP for 1-year AIS was analyzed. To account for missing data, (1) last observation carried forward and (2) multiple imputation methods were applied. For model derivation, our centers’ cohort (EMSCI-HD) was analyzed. For model validation the cohort of other centers (EMSCI-nonHD) was used.ResultsIn the EMSCI-HD cohort, the median age (interquartile range (IQR)) was 52 (34–67) years. 58% were male. The initial AIS distribution was: A = 31%, B = 17%, C = 30%, and D = 22%). In the EMSCI-nonHD cohort, the median age was 49 (32–65) years. Compared to the EMSCI-HD cohort more patients were male (79%, p = 0.0034). The AIS distribution was: A = 33%, B = 13%, C = 21%, and D = 33%).In complete-case mixed model analyses (EMSCI-HD: n = 114; EMSCI-nonHD: n = 508) higher ulnar nerve CMAP were associated with better AIS grades over the entire follow up period. In complete-case logistic regression (EMSCI-HD: n = 90; EMSCI-nonHD: n = 444) higher ulnar nerve CMAP was an independent predictor of better AIS grades. The odds ratio for within 4-week ulnar nerve CMAP to predict 1-year AIS grade D versus A-C in the EMSCI-HD cohort was 1.24 per millivolt (confidence interval 1.07–1.44). The model was validated in an independent cervical spinal cord injury (EMSCI-nonHD) cohort (odds ratio 1.09, confidence interval 1.03–1.17).ConclusionsIn cervical spinal cord injury, the consideration of early ulnar nerve CMAP improves prognostic accuracy, which is of particular importance in patients with clinical grading uncertainties.

Highlights

  • Accurate predictors of neurological recovery after cervical spinal cord injury are needed

  • Early and accurate prediction of neurological recovery is a major goal in the care of traumatic cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) for (1) providing patients with a realistic prognosis, (2) an effective and tailored rehabilitation plan and (3) the correct risk stratification in clinical trials

  • Demographic and clinical data Over a recruiting period of 11 years (2001–2012) we identified 249 patients with cervical SCI (NLI C1-T1) in the European Multicenter Study about Spinal Cord Injury (EMSCI)-Heidelberg Center (HD) cohort

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Summary

Introduction

Accurate predictors of neurological recovery after cervical spinal cord injury are needed. And accurate prediction of neurological recovery is a major goal in the care of traumatic cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) for (1) providing patients with a realistic prognosis, (2) an effective and tailored rehabilitation plan and (3) the correct risk stratification in clinical trials. One study demonstrated that pathologic ulnar nerve ENG (i.e. reduced CMAP amplitudes) is associated with worse hand function in cervical SCI. Except for worse hand function [3] and the possibility to discern between a central versus peripheral paresis pattern [6], ulnar nerve ENG was not systematically analyzed in cervical SCI as predictor of neurological recovery (AIS conversion) and its role as a surrogate marker for axonal injury to corticospinal neurons within the cervical spinal cord

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