Az orvos-, egészségtudományi- és gyógyszerészképzés tudományos műhelyeinek fejlesztése(EFOP-3.6.3-VEKOP-16-2017-00009)
Támogató: EFOP-VEKOP
(K120706)
Ongoing changes in post resuscitation medicine and society create a range of ethical
challenges for clinicians. Withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment is a very sensitive,
complex decision to be made by the treatment team and the relatives together. According
to the guidelines, prognostication after cardiopulmonary resuscitation should be based
on a combination of clinical examination, biomarkers, imaging, and electrophysiological
testing. Several prognostic scores exist to predict neurological and mortality outcome
in post-cardiac arrest patients. We aimed to perform a meta-analysis and systematic
review of current scoring systems used after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA).Our
systematic search was conducted in four databases: Medline, Embase, Central and Scopus
on 24th April 2023. The patient population consisted of successfully resuscitated
adult patients after OHCA. We included all prognostic scoring systems in our analysis
suitable to estimate neurologic function as the primary outcome and mortality as the
secondary outcome. For each score and outcome, we collected the AUC (area under curve)
values and their CIs (confidence iterval) and performed a random-effects meta-analysis
to obtain pooled AUC estimates with 95% CI. To visualize the trade-off between sensitivity
and specificity achieved using different thresholds, we created the Summary Receiver
Operating Characteristic (SROC) curves.24,479 records were identified, 51 of which
met the selection criteria and were included in the qualitative analysis. Of these,
24 studies were included in the quantitative synthesis. The performance of CAHP (Cardiac
Arrest Hospital Prognosis) (0.876 [0.853-0.898]) and OHCA (0.840 [0.824-0.856]) was
good to predict neurological outcome at hospital discharge, and TTM (Targeted Temperature
Management) (0.880 [0.844-0.916]), CAHP (0.843 [0.771-0.915]) and OHCA (0.811 [0.759-0.863])
scores predicted good the 6-month neurological outcome. We were able to confirm the
superiority of the CAHP score especially in the high specificity range based on our
sensitivity and specificity analysis.Based on our results CAHP is the most accurate
scoring system for predicting the neurological outcome at hospital discharge and is
a bit less accurate than TTM score for the 6-month outcome. We recommend the use of
the CAHP scoring system in everyday clinical practice not only because of its accuracy
and the best performance concerning specificity but also because of the rapid and
easy availability of the necessary clinical data for the calculation.