l-arginine, asymmetric and symmetric dimethylarginine for early outcome prediction in unselected cardiac arrest victims: a prospective cohort study
Beáta Csiszár, Zsolt Márton, J Riba, Péter Csécsei, Lajos Nagy, Kálmán Tóth, Róbert Halmosi, Barbara Sándor, P. Kenyeres, Tihamér Molnár
Abstract
Early prediction of the mortality, neurological outcome is clinically essential after successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation. To find a prognostic marker among unselected cardiac arrest survivors, we aimed to evaluate the alterations of the L-arginine pathway molecules in the early post-resuscitation care. We prospectively enrolled adult patients after successfully resuscitated in- or out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Blood samples were drawn within 6, 24, and 72 post-cardiac arrest hours to measure asymmetric and symmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA and SDMA) and L-arginine plasma concentrations. We recorded Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, Simplified Acute Physiology Score, and Cerebral Performance Category scores. Endpoints were 72 h, intensive care unit, and 30-day mortality. Among 54 enrolled patients [median age: 67 (61-78) years, 48% male], the initial ADMA levels were significantly elevated in those who died within 72 h [0.88 (0.64-0.97) µmol/L vs. 0.55 (0.45-0.69) µmol/L, p = 0.001]. Based on receiver operator characteristic analysis (AUC = 0.723; p = 0.005) of initial ADMA for poor neurological outcome, the best cutoff was determined as > 0.65 µmol/L (sensitivity = 66.7%; specificity = 81.5%), while for 72 h mortality (AUC = 0.789; p = 0.001) as > 0.81 µmol/L (sensitivity = 71.0%; specificity = 87.5%). Based on multivariate analysis, initial ADMA (OR = 1.8 per 0.1 µmol/L increment; p = 0.002) was an independent predictor for 72 h mortality. Increased initial ADMA predicts 72 h mortality and poor neurological outcome among unselected cardiac arrest victims.