| Literature DB >> 32578124 |
J Javier Provencio1, J Claude Hemphill2, Jan Claassen3, Brian L Edlow4, Raimund Helbok5, Paul M Vespa6, Michael N Diringer7, Len Polizzotto8, Lori Shutter9, Jose I Suarez10, Robert D Stevens10, Daniel F Hanley11, Yama Akbari12, Thomas P Bleck13, Melanie Boly14, Brandon Foreman15, Joseph T Giacino16, Jed A Hartings17, Theresa Human18, Daniel Kondziella19, Geoffrey S F Ling20, Stephan A Mayer21, Molly McNett22, David K Menon23, Geert Meyfroidt24, Martin M Monti25, Soojin Park3, Nader Pouratian26, Louis Puybasset27, Benjamin Rohaut28, Eric S Rosenthal4, Nicholas D Schiff29, Tarek Sharshar30,31, Amy Wagner32, John Whyte33, DaiWai M Olson34.
Abstract
Coma and disordered consciousness are common manifestations of acute neurological conditions and are among the most pervasive and challenging aspects of treatment in neurocritical care. Gaps exist in patient assessment, outcome prognostication, and treatment directed specifically at improving consciousness and cognitive recovery. In 2019, the Neurocritical Care Society (NCS) launched the Curing Coma Campaign in order to address the "grand challenge" of improving the management of patients with coma and decreased consciousness. One of the first steps was to bring together a Scientific Advisory Council including coma scientists, neurointensivists, neurorehabilitationists, and implementation experts in order to address the current scientific landscape and begin to develop a framework on how to move forward. This manuscript describes the proceedings of the first Curing Coma Campaign Scientific Advisory Council meeting which occurred in conjunction with the NCS Annual Meeting in October 2019 in Vancouver. Specifically, three major pillars were identified which should be considered: endotyping of coma and disorders of consciousness, biomarkers, and proof-of-concept clinical trials. Each is summarized with regard to current approach, benefits to the patient, family, and clinicians, and next steps. Integration of these three pillars will be essential to the success of the Curing Coma Campaign as will expanding the "curing coma community" to ensure broad participation of clinicians, scientists, and patient advocates with the goal of identifying and implementing treatments to fundamentally improve the outcome of patients.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Coma; Consciousness; Endotype; Recovery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32578124 PMCID: PMC7392933 DOI: 10.1007/s12028-020-01028-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocrit Care ISSN: 1541-6933 Impact factor: 3.210
Currently used biomarkers for the assessment of consciousness
| Structural assessment: brain MRI (FLAIR, high resolution T1, diffusion tensor imaging), Head CT |
| Neuronal activity: spectral analysis (ABCD classification), permutation entropy and spectral complexity and connectivity measures of the resting EEG |
| Functional connectivity: EEG coherence, phase-amplitude modulations, resting state functional MRI |
| Direct measures of brain physiology: metabolism (FDG PET), oxygen (partial brain tissue oxygenation and oxygen saturation), blood flow (MR or CT perfusion imaging, MR arterial spin labeling, Xenon CTP, invasive measure of rCBF), ICP/CPP, cerebral metabolites (MR spectroscopy, microdialysis), brain water content, brain temperature, cortical spreading depolarization |
| Measures reflecting injury to the brain: CSF and serum (NSE, S110Beta, GFAP, vimentin, myelin basic protein, inflammatory markers such as IgG electrophoresis) |
| Sensory stimulation induced evoked potentials (SSEP, BAEP, MEP): short vs long latency |
| Event-related potentials: cognitive processing involved with processing of regularities (i.e., local global paradigm), processing of ERPs induced modulation of the autonomic nervous system |
| Transcranial magnetic stimulation with high-density EEG co-registration |
| Stimulus-based functional EEG or functional MRI (e.g., with language or music stimuli) |
| Behavioral assessment: coma recovery scale-revised, other less comprehensive clinical scales (FOUR score, Glasgow Coma Score), differential electromyographic response |
| Task-based functional EEG or functional MRI (e.g., commanded motor acts, motor imagery, or spatial navigation) |
BAEP brainstem auditory evoked potential, CPP cerebral perfusion pressure, CT computed tomography, CTP computed tomographic perfusion, EEG electroencephalography, ERP event-related potential, FDG PET fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, FLAIR fluid-attenuated inversion recovery, FOUR full outline of unresponsiveness, GFAP glial fibrillary acidic protein, ICP intracranial pressure, MEP motor evoked potential, MR magnetic resonance, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, NSE neuron specific enolase, rCBF regional cerebral blood flow,SSEP somatosensory evoked potential