Association Between Dose Escalation of Anesthetics and Outcomes in Patients With Refractory Status Epilepticus.

Neurology

From the Department of Neurology (U.F., G.M.D.M., S.J.R., R.S.), and Clinic for Intensive Care Medicine (A.L.J., S.M.B., S.S., S.H., S.M., R.S.), University Hospital Basel; Department of Clinical Research and Medical Faculty of the University of Basel (G.M.D.M., S.J.R., S.H., S.M., R.S.); and Medical Communication and Psychosomatic Medicine (S.H.), University Hospital Basel, Switzerland.

Published: January 2024

Background And Objectives: To investigate the association between dose escalation of continuously administered IV anesthetics and its duration with short-term outcomes in adult patients treated for refractory status epilepticus (RSE).

Methods: Clinical and electroencephalographic data of patients with RSE without hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy who were treated with anesthetics at a Swiss academic medical center from 2011 to 2019 were assessed. The frequency of anesthetic dose escalation (i.e., dose increase) and its associations with in-hospital death or return to premorbid neurologic function were primary endpoints. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to identify associations with endpoints.

Results: Among 111 patients with RSE, doses of anesthetics were escalated in 57%. Despite patients with dose escalation having a higher morbidity (lower Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] score at status epilepticus [SE] onset, more presumably fatal etiologies, longer duration of SE and intensive care, more infections, and arterial hypotension) as compared with patients without, the primary endpoints did not differ between these groups in univariable analyses. Multivariable analyses revealed decreased odds for death with dose escalation (odds ratio 0.09, 95% CI 0.01-0.86), independent of initial GCS score, presumably fatal etiology, SE severity score, SE duration, and nonconvulsive SE with coma, with similar functional outcome among survivors compared with patients without dose escalation.

Discussion: Our study reveals that anesthetic dose escalation in adult patients with RSE is associated with decreased odds for death without increasing the proportion of surviving patients with worse neurofunctional state than before RSE.

Classification Of Evidence: This study provides Class III evidence that anesthetic dose escalation decreases the odds of death in patients with RSE.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000207995DOI Listing

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