Cristia Cristal, Ho Mai-Lan, Levy Sean, Andersen Lars W, Perman Sarah M, Giberson Tyler, Salciccioli Justin D, Saindon Brian Z, Cocchi Michael N, Donnino Michael W
Department of Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Radiology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, United States.
Resuscitation. 2014 Oct;85(10):1348-53. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2014.05.022. Epub 2014 Jun 2.
Previous studies have examined the association between quantitative head computed tomography (CT) measures of cerebral edema and patient outcomes reporting that a calculated gray matter to white matter attenuation ratio (GWR) of <1.2 indicates a near 100% non-survivable injury post-cardiac arrest. The objective of the current study was to validate whether a GWR <1.2 reliably indicates poor survival post-cardiac arrest. We also sought to determine the inter-rater variability among reviewers, and examine the utility of a novel GWR measurement to facilitate easier practical use.
We performed a retrospective analysis of post-cardiac arrest patients admitted to a single center from 2008 to 2012. Inclusion criteria were age ≥18 years, non-traumatic arrest, and available CT imaging within 24h after ROSC. Three independent physician reviewers from different specialties measured CT attenuation of pre-specified gray and white matter areas for GWR calculations.
Out of 171 consecutive patients, 90 met the study inclusion criteria. Thirteen patients were excluded for technical reasons and/or significant additional pathology, leaving 77 head CT scans for evaluation. Median age was 66 years and 64% were male. In-hospital mortality was 65% and 70% of patients received therapeutic hypothermia. For the validation measurement, the intra-class correlation coefficient was 0.70. In our dataset, a GWR below 1.2 did not accurately predict mortality or poor neurological outcome (sensitivity 0.56-0.62 and specificity 0.63-0.81). A score below 1.1 predicted a near 100% mortality but was not a sensitive metric (sensitivity 0.14-0.20 and specificity 0.96-1.00). Similar results were found for the exploratory model.
A GWR <1.2 on CT imaging within 24h after cardiac arrest was moderately specific for poor neurologic outcome and mortality. Based on our data, a threshold GWR <1.1 may be a safer cut-off to identify patients with low chance of survival and good neurological outcome. Intra-class correlation among reviewers was moderately good.
既往研究探讨了脑水肿的头颅计算机断层扫描(CT)定量测量与患者预后之间的关联,报告称计算得出的灰质与白质衰减比(GWR)<1.2表明心脏骤停后损伤几乎100%不可存活。本研究的目的是验证GWR<1.2是否能可靠地表明心脏骤停后生存情况不佳。我们还试图确定评估者之间的评分者间变异性,并检验一种新型GWR测量方法的实用性,以使其更便于实际应用。
我们对2008年至2012年入住单一中心的心脏骤停后患者进行了回顾性分析。纳入标准为年龄≥18岁、非创伤性心脏骤停以及在自主循环恢复(ROSC)后24小时内有可用的CT影像。三位来自不同专业的独立医生评估者测量了预先指定的灰质和白质区域的CT衰减,以计算GWR。
在171例连续患者中,90例符合研究纳入标准。13例患者因技术原因和/或显著的其他病变被排除,剩余77份头颅CT扫描用于评估。中位年龄为66岁,64%为男性。住院死亡率为65%,70%的患者接受了治疗性低温。对于验证测量,组内相关系数为0.70。在我们的数据集中,GWR低于1.2不能准确预测死亡率或不良神经学预后(敏感性为0.56 - 0.62,特异性为0.63 - 0.81)。低于1.1的评分预测死亡率接近100%,但不是一个敏感指标(敏感性为0.14 - 0.20,特异性为0.96 - 1.00)。探索性模型也得到了类似结果。
心脏骤停后24小时内CT影像上GWR<1.2对不良神经学预后和死亡率具有中等特异性。基于我们的数据,阈值GWR<1.1可能是一个更安全的截断值,用于识别生存机会低且神经学预后良好的患者。评估者之间的组内相关性中等良好。