Willingham M, Ben Abdallah A, Gradwohl S, Helsten D, Lin N, Villafranca A, Jacobsohn E, Avidan M, Kaiser H
Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University in St Louis School of Medicine, Campus Box 8054, 660 S. Euclid Ave., St Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Department of Mathematics, Washington University in St Louis, Campus Box 1146, One Brookings Drive, St Louis, MO 63130, USA.
Br J Anaesth. 2014 Dec;113(6):1001-8. doi: 10.1093/bja/aeu105. Epub 2014 May 22.
Low bispectral index values frequently reflect EEG suppression and have been associated with postoperative mortality. This study investigated whether intraoperative EEG suppression was an independent predictor of 90 day postoperative mortality and explored risk factors for EEG suppression.
This observational study included 2662 adults enrolled in the B-Unaware or BAG-RECALL trials. A cohort was defined with >5 cumulative minutes of EEG suppression, and 1:2 propensity-matched to a non-suppressed cohort (≤5 min suppression). We evaluated the association between EEG suppression and mortality using multivariable logistic regression, and examined risk factors for EEG suppression using zero-inflated mixed effects analysis.
Ninety day postoperative mortality was 3.9% overall, 6.3% in the suppressed cohort, and 3.0% in the non-suppressed cohort {odds ratio (OR) [95% confidence interval (CI)]=2.19 (1.48-3.26)}. After matching and multivariable adjustment, EEG suppression was not associated with mortality [OR (95% CI)=0.83 (0.55-1.25)]; however, the interaction between EEG suppression and mean arterial pressure (MAP) <55 mm Hg was [OR (95% CI)=2.96 (1.34-6.52)]. Risk factors for EEG suppression were older age, number of comorbidities, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and higher intraoperative doses of benzodiazepines, opioids, or volatile anaesthetics. EEG suppression was less likely in patients with cancer, preoperative alcohol, opioid or benzodiazepine consumption, and intraoperative nitrous oxide exposure.
Although EEG suppression was associated with increasing anaesthetic administration and comorbidities, the hypothesis that intraoperative EEG suppression is a predictor of postoperative mortality was only supported if it was coincident with low MAP.
NCT00281489 and NCT00682825.
低双谱指数值常反映脑电图抑制,并与术后死亡率相关。本研究调查术中脑电图抑制是否为术后90天死亡率的独立预测因素,并探讨脑电图抑制的危险因素。
这项观察性研究纳入了参与B-Unaware或BAG-RECALL试验的2662名成年人。定义一个脑电图抑制累计超过5分钟的队列,并按1:2倾向评分匹配一个未抑制队列(抑制时间≤5分钟)。我们使用多变量逻辑回归评估脑电图抑制与死亡率之间的关联,并使用零膨胀混合效应分析检查脑电图抑制的危险因素。
术后90天总体死亡率为3.9%,抑制队列中为6.3%,未抑制队列中为3.0%{比值比(OR)[95%置信区间(CI)]=2.19(1.48-3.26)}。匹配和多变量调整后,脑电图抑制与死亡率无关[OR(95%CI)=0.83(0.55-1.25)];然而,脑电图抑制与平均动脉压(MAP)<55 mmHg之间的交互作用为[OR(95%CI)=2.96(1.34-6.52)]。脑电图抑制的危险因素包括年龄较大、合并症数量、慢性阻塞性肺疾病以及术中较高剂量的苯二氮䓬类药物、阿片类药物或挥发性麻醉剂。癌症患者、术前饮酒、使用阿片类药物或苯二氮䓬类药物以及术中接触氧化亚氮的患者脑电图抑制的可能性较小。
尽管脑电图抑制与麻醉药物用量增加和合并症有关,但术中脑电图抑制是术后死亡率预测因素的假设仅在与低MAP同时出现时得到支持。
NCT00281489和NCT00682825。