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  3. Sedation and analgesia in post-cardiac arrest care: a post hoc analysis of the TTM2 trial.
 

Sedation and analgesia in post-cardiac arrest care: a post hoc analysis of the TTM2 trial.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/88680
Date of Publication
June 17, 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Clinic of Intensive C...

Contributor
Ceric, Ameldina
Dankiewicz, Josef
Cronberg, Tobias
Düring, Joachim
Moseby-Knappe, Marion
Annborn, Martin
May, Teresa L
Thomas, Matthew
Grejs, Anders Morten
Rylander, Christian
Belohlavek, Jan
Wendel-Garcia, Pedro
Haenggi, Matthiasorcid-logo
Clinic of Intensive Care Medicine
Schrag, Claudia
Hilty, Matthias P
Keeble, Thomas R
Wise, Matt P
Young, Paul
Taccone, Fabio Silvio
Robba, Chiara
Cariou, Alain
Eastwood, Glenn
Saxena, Manoj
Ullén, Susann
Lilja, Gisela
Jakobsen, Janus C
Lybeck, Anna
Nielsen, Niklas
Series
Critical Care
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1466-609X
1364-8535
Publisher
BioMed Central
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1186/s13054-025-05461-0
PubMed ID
40528173
Uncontrolled Keywords

Cardiac arrest

Midazolam

Propofol

Sedation

Seizures

Targeted temperature ...

Description
Background
The routine use of sedation and analgesia during post-cardiac arrest care and its association with clinical outcomes remain unclear. This study aimed to describe the use of sedatives and analgesics in post-cardiac arrest care, and evaluate associations with good functional outcome, survival, clinical seizures, and late awakening.Methods
This was a post hoc analysis of the TTM2-trial, which randomized 1900 out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients to either normothermia or hypothermia. In both groups, deep sedation (Richmond Agitation and Sedation Scale ≤ -4) was mandatory during the 40-h intervention. Cumulative doses of sedatives and analgesic drugs were recorded within the first 72 h from randomization. Outcomes were functional outcome (modified Rankin Scale) and survival status at 6 months, occurrence of clinical seizures during the intensive care stay, and late awakening (Full outline of unresponsiveness motor score of four 96 h after randomization). Cumulative propofol doses were divided into quartiles (Q1-Q4). Logistic regression models were used to assess associations between sedative doses and functional outcome and survival, clinical seizures, and late awakening, adjusting for the severity of illness and other clinical factors influencing sedation.Results
A total of 1861 patients were analyzed. In a multivariable logistic regression model, higher propofol doses (Q3, 100.7-153.6 mg/kg) were associated with good functional outcome (OR 1.62, 95%CI 1.12-2.34) and (Q2 and Q3, 43.9-153.6 mg/kg) with survival (OR 1.49, 95%CI 1.05-2.12 and OR 1.84, 95%CI 1.27-2.65, respectively). Receiving fentanyl and remifentanil were associated with good functional outcome (OR 1.69, 95%CI 1.27-2.26 and OR 1.50, 95%CI 1.11-2.02) and survival (OR 1.80, 95%CI 1.35-2.40 and OR 1.56, 95%CI 1.16-2.10). Receiving fentanyl (OR 0.64, 95%CI 0.48-0.86) and higher propofol doses (Q2-4 (43.9-669.4 mg/kg) were associated with the occurrence of clinical seizures. The highest quartile of propofol dose (153.7-669.4 mg/kg, OR 3.19, 95%CI 1.91-5.42) was associated with late awakening.Conclusions
In this study, higher doses of propofol and the use of remifentanil and fentanyl were associated with good functional outcome and survival, occurrence of clinical seizures, and late awakening.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/212294
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