| Literature DB >> 33403587 |
Jaana Humaloja1, Markus B Skrifvars2, Rahul Raj3, Erika Wilkman4, Pirkka T Pekkarinen4, Stepani Bendel5, Matti Reinikainen5, Erik Litonius6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In neurocritically ill patients, one early mechanism behind secondary brain injury is low systemic blood pressure resulting in inadequate cerebral perfusion and consequent hypoxia. Intuitively, higher partial pressures of arterial oxygen (PaO2) could be protective in case of inadequate cerebral circulation related to hemodynamic instability. STUDYEntities:
Keywords: Acute ischemic stroke; Cardiac arrest; Hyperoxemia; Hypotension; Intracranial hemorrhage; Partial pressure of arterial oxygen; Subarachnoid hemorrhage; Traumatic brain injury
Year: 2021 PMID: 33403587 PMCID: PMC8128839 DOI: 10.1007/s12028-020-01178-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocrit Care ISSN: 1541-6933 Impact factor: 3.210
Fig. 1Flowchart of patient inclusion and exclusion. AIS acute ischemic stroke, CA cardiac arrest, FICC Finnish Intensive Care Consortium, ICH intracranial hemorrhage, SAH subarachnoid hemorrhage, TBI traumatic brain injury, WHO/ECOG (the World Health Organization/Eastern Co-operative Oncology) performance status score < 3 determined patient as independent.
Baseline characteristics of study population in whole study sample and in different brain injury populations
| All | TBI | CA | SAH | ICH + AIS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients (%) | 8290 | 1974 (24) | 3446 (41) | 1135 (14) | 1735 (21) |
| Age, median [IQR] | 61 [50–71] | 55 [40–67] | 64 [56–73] | 57 [49–66] | 61 [51–70] |
| Gender (female), | 2571 (31) | 444 (23) | 906 (26) | 642 (57) | 579 (33) |
| Premorbid physical performance independent in self-care (yes), | 7386 (89) | 1802 (91) | 2908 (84) | 1097 (97) | 1579 (91) |
| PaO2 (kPa), median [IQR] | 11.5 [9.6–14.4] | 12.8 [10.4–15.9] | 10.8 [9–13.5] | 11.3 [9.6–14] | 11.6 [9.9–14.5] |
| PaO2 groups | |||||
| Hypoxemia (< 8.20 kPa), | 873 (10.5) | 113 (6) | 558 (16) | 84 (7) | 118 (7) |
| Normoxemia (8.2–18.3 kPa), | 6581 (79.4) | 1573 (80) | 2606 (76) | 948 (84) | 1454 (84) |
| Hyperoxemia (> 18.30 kPa), | 836 (10.1) | 288 (14) | 282 (8) | 103 (9) | 163 (9) |
| MAP, lowest during 24 h (mmHg), median [IQR] | 63 [56–71] | 66 [58–73] | 61 [53–67] | 65 [59–71] | 66 [59–76] |
| MAP tertiles, lowest during 24 h | |||||
| < 60 mmHg, | 2902 (35) | 546 (28) | 1557 (45) | 327 (29) | 472 (27) |
| 60–68 mmHg, | 2774 (33) | 626 (32) | 1217 (35) | 431 (38) | 500 (29) |
| > 68 mmHg, n (%) | 2614 (32) | 802 (40) | 672 (20) | 377 (33) | 763 (44) |
| ICP monitored, during 24 h | 1497 (18) | 680 (34) | 51 (2) | 402 (35) | 364 (21) |
| Vasoactive use, any during 24 h, | 5340 (64) | 989 (50) | 2683 (78) | 748 (66) | 920 (53) |
| Glasgow Coma scale at admission, median [IQR] | 6 [3–11] | 6 [4–11] | 5 [3–12] | 8 [4–13] | 6 [3–10] |
| Modified SAPS II scorea, median [IQR] | 26 [11–33] | 19 [10–30] | 30 [15–37] | 15 [17–29] | 26 [11–31] |
| Outcome | |||||
| Dead at 1 year, | 3912 (47) | 606 (31) | 1971 (57) | 419 (37) | 916 (53) |
| Alive but disabledb at 1 year, | 1674 (20) | 586 (29) | 444 (13) | 246 (22) | 398 (23) |
| Alive and independent in self-care at 1 year, | 2704 (33) | 782 (40) | 1031 (30) | 470 (41) | 421 (24) |
AIS acute ischemic stroke, CA cardiac arrest, GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, ICH intracranial hemorrhage, IQR interquartile range, MAP mean arterial pressure, SAH subarachnoid hemorrhage, SAPS II Simplified Acute Physiology Score II, TBI traumatic brain injury
aSAPS II score excluding point for age, admission type, oxygenation, and systolic blood pressure
bdisability was determined if a patient was granted a permanent disability allowance 1 year after admission
Adjusted analysis of 1-year mortality
| Predictor ( | Odds ratio (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 1.03 (1.03–1.04) | < 0.001 |
| Admission diagnosis | ||
| TBI | 1 ( | |
| CA | 1.53 (1.32–1.78) | < 0.001 |
| SAH | 1.61 (1.35–1.92) | < 0.001 |
| ICH + AIS | 2.3 (1.98–2.68) | < 0.001 |
| Premorbid physical performance independent in self-care (yes) | 0.53 (0.45–0.64) | < 0.001 |
| PaO2-group | ||
| Normoxemia 8.2–18.3 kPa | 1 ( | |
| Hyperoxemia > 18.3 kPa | 1.16 (0.85–1.59) | 0.34 |
| Hypoxemia < 8.2 kPa | 1.24 (0.96–1.61) | 0.10 |
| MAP tertiles, lowest in 24 h | ||
| < 60 mmHg | 1 ( | |
| 60–68 mmHg | 0.73 (0.64–0.84) | < 0.001 |
| > 68 mmHg | 0.80 (0.69–0.92) | 0.002 |
| Interaction PaO2-group * MAP tertiles | ||
| Normoxemia * MAP < 60 mmHg | 1 ( | |
| Hyperoxemia * MAP 60–68 mmHg | 0.76 (0.49–1.16) | 0.20 |
| Hypoxemia * MAP 60–68 mmHg | 0.83 (0.57–1.22) | 0.35 |
| Hyperoxemia * MAP > 68 mmHg | 1.03 (0.67–1.57) | 0.90 |
| Hypoxemia * MAP > 68 mmHg | 1.33 (0.86–2.06) | 0.20 |
| Vasoactive, any (yes) | 1.08 (0.96–1.21) | 0.20 |
| Intracranial pressure monitored (yes) | 0.92 (0.79–1.06) | 0.25 |
| Modified SAPS II scorea | 1.08 (1.08–1.09) | < 0.001 |
Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.80 (95% CI 0.79–0.81)
Hosmer–Lemeshow Ĉ goodness-of-fit p < 0.05
AIS acute ischemic stroke, CA cardiac arrest, CI confidence interval, ICH intracranial hemorrhage, modified SAPS II (Simplified Acute Physiology Score II excluding points for age, oxygenation, systolic blood pressure, and type of admission), SAH subarachnoid hemorrhage, TBI traumatic brain injury
aSAPS II score excluding point for age, admission type, oxygenation, and systolic blood pressure
Fig. 2Kaplan–Meier analysis of 1-year mortality between oxygen groups with different mean arterial pressure (MAP) levels. One-year mortality was roughly equal between normoxemia and hyperoxemia groups regardless of MAP level. Mortality was highest with hypoxemic patients in every MAP level, and patients with MAP < 60 mmHg had higher mortality compared to higher MAP levels. Logrank p-value with all three analyses < 0.001
Fig. 3Relationship between arterial partial pressure of oxygen and predicted 1-year mortality with different MAP levels. Locally weighted scatterplot smoothing (Loess) curve visualizing the relationship between arterial oxygen (PaO2) and predicted 1-year mortality with different values of mean arterial pressure (MAP). There is a minor trend of higher mortality with low PaO2 (about < 10 kPa). The relationship between PaO2 and predicted 1-year mortality does not markedly change through MAP levels. Predicted 1-year mortality was calculated separately in every diagnosis cohort and MAP-group with logistic regression analysis with the following parameters: age, preadmission status independent in self-care, intracranial pressure measured, any vasoactive used, modified SAPS II score (excluding points for age, oxygenation, admission type and systolic blood pressure), and TBI Marshall classification in TBI. The performance of predicting the actual 1-year mortality was good in every subgroup; in all subgroups the area under the curve (AUC) > 0.75