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Individualising thresholds of cerebral perfusion pressure using estimated limits of autoregulation

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Adams, H 
Robba, C 
Steiner, LA 

Abstract

Objectives: In severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP) management based on cerebrovascular pressure reactivity (PRx) has the potential to provide a personalised treatment target to improve patient outcomes. So far, the methods have focused on identifying one autoregulation guided CPP target – called CPPopt. We investigated whether a CPP autoregulation range - which uses a continuous estimation of the ‘lower’ and ‘upper’ CPP limits of cerebrovascular pressure autoregulation (PRx) - has prognostic value.

Design: Single-centre retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data

Setting: The neurocritical care unit at a tertiary academic medical centre

Patients: Data from 729 severe TBI patients admitted between 1996 and 2016 were used. Treatment was guided by controlling intracranial pressure and CPP according to a local protocol.

Interventions: None

Methods and Main Results: CPP-PRx curves were fitted automatically using a previously published curve-fitting heuristic from the relationship between PRx and CPP. The CPP values at which this ‘U-shaped curve’ crossed the fixed threshold from intact to impaired pressure reactivity (PRx =0.3) were denoted automatically the ‘Lower’ and ‘Upper’ CPP Limits of Reactivity (LLR and ULR), respectively. The % of time with CPP below (%CPP<LLR), above (%CPP>ULR) or within these reactivity limits (%CPP WLR) was calculated for each patient and compared across dichotomised Glasgow Outcome Scores. After adjusting for age, initial GCS, and mean ICP, %CPP<LLR was associated with unfavourable outcome (OR %CPP<LLR 1.04, 95%-CI 1.02-1.06, p <0.001) and mortality (OR 1.06 95%-CI 1.04-1.08, p<0.001).

Conclusions: Individualised autoregulation-guided CPP management may be a plausible alternative to fixed CPP threshold management in severe TBI patients. Prospective randomized research will help to define which autoregulation guided method is beneficial, safe and most practical.

Description

Keywords

Academic Medical Centers, Adult, Age Factors, Brain Injuries, Traumatic, Cerebrovascular Circulation, Critical Care, Female, Glasgow Coma Scale, Homeostasis, Humans, Intracranial Pressure, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors

Journal Title

Critical Care Medicine

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0090-3493
1530-0293

Volume Title

45

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer Health
Sponsorship
Department of Health (via National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)) (unknown)
Department of Health (via National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)) (unknown)
Medical Research Council (G0600986)
Medical Research Council (G0601025)
TCC (None)
Medical Research Council (G0600986/1)
JD is support by a Woolf Fisher scholarship. PJH is supported by an NIHR Research Professorship, Academy of Medical Sciences/Health Foundation Senior Surgical Scientist Fellowship. DKM is funded by the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Centre (RCZB/004), and an NIHR Senior Investigator Award (RCZB/014).