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Multicenter Study
Development and validation of a clinico-biological score to predict outcomes in patients with drowning-associated cardiac arrest.
- Florian Reizine, Pierre Michelet, Agathe Delbove, Guillaume Rieul, Laetitia Bodenes, Pierre Bouju, Pierre Fillâtre, Aurélien Frérou, Olivier Lesieur, Thibaut Markarian, Arnaud Gacouin, and DrownAP study group.
- CHU Rennes, Maladies Infectieuses et Réanimation Médicale, F 35033 Rennes, France; CH Vannes, Service de Réanimation Polyvalente, 56000, Vannes, France. Electronic address: florian.reizine@gmail.com.
- Am J Emerg Med. 2024 Jul 1; 81: 697469-74.
BackgroundWhile several scoring systems have been developed to predict short-term outcome in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients, there is currently no dedicated prognostic tool for drowning-associated cardiac arrest (DACA) patients.MethodsPatients experiencing DACA from two retrospective multicenter cohorts of drowning patients were included in the present study. Among the patients from the development cohort, risk-factors for day-28 mortality were assessed by logistic regression. A prediction score was conceived and assessed in patients from the validation cohort.ResultsAmong the 103 included patients from the development cohort, the day-28 mortality rate reached 51% (53/103). Identified independent early risk-factors for day-28 mortality included cardiopulmonary resuscitation duration longer than 20 min (OR 6.40 [95% CI 1.88-23.32]; p = 0.003), temperature at Intensive Care Unit admission <34 °C (OR 8.84 [95% CI 2.66-32.92]; p < 0.001), need for invasive mechanical ventilation (OR 6.83 [95% CI 1.47-40.87]; p = 0.02) and lactate concentration > 7 mmol/L (OR 3.56 [95% CI 1.01-13.07]; p = 0.04). The Area Under the ROC Curve (AUC) of the developed score based on those variables reached 0.91 (95% CI, 0.86-0.97). The optimal cut-off for predicting poor outcomes was 4 points with a sensitivity of 92% (95% CI, 82-98%), a specificity of 82% (95% CI, 67-91%), a positive predictive value (PPV) of 84% (95% CI, 72-95%) and a negative predictive value (NPV) of 91% (95% CI, 79-96%). The assessment of this score on the validation cohort of 81 patients exhibited an AUC of 0.82. Using the same 4 points threshold, sensitivity, specificity, PPV and NPV values of the validation cohort were: 81%, 67%, 72% and 77%, respectively.ConclusionIn patients suffering from drowning induced initial cardiac arrest admitted to ICU with a DACA score ≥ 4, the likelihood of survival at day-28 is significantly lower. Prospective validation of the DACA score and assessment of its usefulness are warranted in the future.Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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