Results
We identified ten
independent predictors of a poor outcome: older age, cardiac arrest
occurring at home, initial rhythm other than ventricular
fibrillation/tachycardia, longer duration of no flow, longer duration
of low flow, administration of adrenaline, bilateral absence of
corneal and pupillary reflexes, Glasgow Coma Scale motor response 1,
lower pH and a partial pressure of carbon dioxide in arterial blood
value lower than 4.5 kPa at hospital admission. A risk score based on
the impact of each of these variables in the model yielded a median
(range) AUC of 0.842 (0.840–0.845) and good calibration. Internal
validation of the score using bootstrapping yielded a median (range)
AUC corrected for optimism of 0.818 (0.816–0.821).
Conclusions
Among variables
available at admission to intensive care, we identified ten
independent predictors of a poor outcome at 6 months for initial
survivors of OHCA. They reflected pre-hospital circumstances (six
variables) and patient status on hospital admission (four variables).
By using a simple and easy-to-use risk scoring system based on these
variables, patients at high risk for a poor outcome after OHCA may be
identified early.
No comments:
Post a Comment