• J Clin Neurophysiol · Nov 2017

    Observational Study

    Interrater Agreement of EEG Interpretation After Pediatric Cardiac Arrest Using Standardized Critical Care EEG Terminology.

    • Nicholas S Abend, Shavonne L Massey, Mark Fitzgerald, France Fung, Natalie J Atkin, Rui Xiao, and Alexis A Topjian.
    • Departments of *Neurology, †Pediatrics, and ‡Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.; and §Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
    • J Clin Neurophysiol. 2017 Nov 1; 34 (6): 534-541.

    PurposeWe evaluated interrater agreement of EEG interpretation in a cohort of critically ill children resuscitated after cardiac arrest using standardized EEG terminology.MethodsFour pediatric electroencephalographers scored 10-minute EEG segments from 72 consecutive children obtained 24 hours after return of circulation using the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society's (ACNS) Standardized Critical Care EEG terminology. The percent of perfect agreement and the kappa coefficient were calculated for each of the standardized EEG variables and a predetermined composite EEG background category.ResultsThe overall background category (normal, slow-disorganized, discontinuous, or attenuated-featureless) had almost perfect agreement (kappa 0.89).The ACNS Standardized Critical Care EEG variables had agreement that was (1) almost perfect for the seizures variable (kappa 0.93), (2) substantial for the continuity (kappa 0.79), voltage (kappa 0.70), and sleep transient (kappa 0.65) variables, (3) moderate for the rhythmic or periodic patterns (kappa 0.55) and interictal epileptiform discharge (kappa 0.60) variables, and (4) fair for the predominant frequency (kappa 0.23) and symmetry (kappa 0.31) variables. Condensing variable options led to improved agreement for the continuity and voltage variables.ConclusionsThese data support the use of the standardized terminology and the composite overall background category as a basis for standardized EEG interpretation for subsequent studies assessing EEG background for neuroprognostication after pediatric cardiac arrest.

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