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Longitudinal serum neurofilament light kinetics in post-anoxic encephalopathy.

Giulio DisantoMichele VillaAleksandra Maleska MaceskiChiara ProsperettiClaudio GobbiJens KuhleTiziano CassinaPamela Agazzi
Published in: Annals of clinical and translational neurology (2023)
Serum neurofilament light (sNfL) is a promising marker of outcome after cardiac arrest, but its kinetics are unclear. We prospectively measured sNfL concentrations in 62 patients at 0, 1, 3, 5, 7 and 10 days after cardiac arrest. Survivors and non-survivors had similar sNfL at admission (14.2 [8.6-21.9] vs. 22.5 [14.2-46.9] pg/mL) but largely different at 24 h (16.4 [10.2-293] vs. 464.3 [151.8-1658.2], respectively). The AUC for sNfL concentrations predicting death was above 0.95 from Day 1 to 10 (highest on Day 3). Late sNfL measurements may exert prognostic value, especially when early samples are unavailable or prognosis remains unclear.
Keyphrases
  • cardiac arrest
  • cardiopulmonary resuscitation
  • cerebrospinal fluid
  • young adults
  • early onset
  • cross sectional
  • aqueous solution