AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) face high risks of complications and often suffer from post-cardiac arrest syndrome (PCAS), which is characterized by systemic inflammation linked to poor outcomes, including brain injury and increased mortality.
  • The study is a randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial with 120 unconscious OHCA patients, assessed for the effects of high-dose glucocorticoid methylprednisolone on inflammation and neuroprotection, administered after achieving sustained return of spontaneous circulation.
  • The main goals are to reduce inflammatory markers like interleukin-6 and neuron-specific enolase, while also evaluating additional markers of organ damage, safety, and neurological recovery at follow-up through collected blood samples

Article Abstract

Background: Patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) have a high morbidity and mortality risk and often develop post-cardiac arrest syndrome (PCAS) involving systemic inflammation. The severity of the inflammatory response is associated with adverse outcome, with anoxic irreversible brain injury as the leading cause of death following resuscitated OHCA. The study aimed to investigate the anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective effect of pre-hospital administration of a high-dose glucocorticoid following OHCA.

Methods: The study is an investigator-initiated, randomized, multicenter, single-blinded, placebo-controlled, clinical trial. Inclusion will continue until one hundred twenty unconscious OHCA patients surviving a minimum of 72 h are randomized. Intervention is a 1:1 randomization to an infusion of methylprednisolone 250 mg following a minimum of 5 min of sustained return of spontaneous circulation in the pre-hospital setting. Methylprednisolone will be given as a bolus infusion of 1 × 250 mg (1 × 4 mL) over a period of 5 min. Patients allocated to placebo will receive 4 mL of isotonic saline (NaCl 0.9%). Main eligibility criteria are OHCA of presumed cardiac cause, age ≥ 18 years, Glasgow Coma Scale ≤ 8, and sustained ROSC for at least 5 min. Co-primary endpoint: Reduction of interleukin-6 and neuron-specific-enolase. Secondary endpoints: Markers of inflammation, brain, cardiac, kidney and liver damage, hemodynamic and hemostatic function, safety, neurological function at follow-up, and mortality. A research biobank is set up with blood samples taken daily during the first 72 h from hospitalization to evaluate primary and secondary endpoints.

Discussion: We hypothesize that early anti-inflammatory steroid treatment in the pre-hospital setting can mitigate the progression of PCAS following resuscitated OHCA. Primary endpoints will be assessed through analyses of biomarkers for inflammation and neurological damage taken during the first 72 h of admission.

Trial Registration: EudraCT number: 2020-000855-11 ; submitted March 30, 2020 ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04624776; submitted October 12, 2020, first posted November 10, 2020.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9682762PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-022-06838-0DOI Listing

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