| Literature DB >> 29681213 |
Emoke Olah1, Laszlo Poto2, Peter Hegyi1,3,4, Imre Szabo3, Petra Hartmann5, Margit Solymar1, Erika Petervari1, Marta Balasko1, Tamas Habon6, Zoltan Rumbus1, Judit Tenk1, Ildiko Rostas1, Jordan Weinberg7, Andrej A Romanovsky7, Andras Garami1.
Abstract
Therapeutic hypothermia was investigated repeatedly as a tool to improve the outcome of severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), but previous clinical trials and meta-analyses found contradictory results. We aimed to determine the effectiveness of therapeutic whole-body hypothermia on the deaths of adult patients with severe TBI by using a novel approach of meta-analysis. We searched the PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library databases from inception to February 2017. The identified human studies were evaluated regarding statistical, clinical, and methodological designs to ensure interstudy homogeneity. We extracted data on TBI severity, body temperature, death, and cooling parameters; then we calculated the cooling index, an integrated measure of therapeutic hypothermia. Forest plot of all identified studies showed no difference in the outcome of TBI between cooled and not cooled patients, but interstudy heterogeneity was high. On the contrary, by meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials that were homogenous with regard to statistical, clinical designs, and precisely reported the cooling protocol, we showed decreased odds ratio for death in therapeutic hypothermia compared with no cooling. As independent factors, milder and longer cooling, and rewarming at <0.25°C/h were associated with better outcome. Therapeutic hypothermia was beneficial only if the cooling index (measure of combination of cooling parameters) was sufficiently high. We conclude that high methodological and statistical interstudy heterogeneity could underlie the contradictory results obtained in previous studies. By analyzing methodologically homogenous studies, we show that cooling improves the outcome of severe TBI, and this beneficial effect depends on certain cooling parameters and on their integrated measure, the cooling index.Entities:
Keywords: induced hypothermia; meta-analysis; mortality; thermoregulation; traumatic brain injury
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29681213 DOI: 10.1089/neu.2018.5649
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurotrauma ISSN: 0897-7151 Impact factor: 5.269