Published November 2, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Stratification of unresponsive patients by an independently validated index of brain complexity.

  • 1. Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences "L. Sacco", University of Milan, Milan, Italy.
  • 2. Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences "L. Sacco", University of Milan, Milan, Italy
  • 3. Department of Health Science, School of Medicine and Surgery, University of Milan-Bicocca, Monza, Italy
  • 4. Institute of Science and Technology, Federal University of São Paulo, São José dos Campos, Brazil
  • 5. Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico, Fondazione Don Gnocchi Onlus, Milan, Italy
  • 6. Department of Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA
  • 7. Coma Science Group, GIGA, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium
  • 8. Neurocritical Care Unit, Department of Neuroscience, Azienda Socio-Sanitaria Territoriale, Grande Ospedale Metropolitano Niguarda Cà Granda, Milan, Italy
  • 9. Fondazione Europea per la Ricerca Biomedica, Milan, Italy

Description

OBJECTIVE:

Validating objective, brain-based indices of consciousness in behaviorally unresponsive patients represents a challenge due to the impossibility of obtaining independent evidence through subjective reports. Here we address this problem by first validating a promising metric of consciousness-the Perturbational Complexity Index (PCI)-in a benchmark population who could confirm the presence or absence of consciousness through subjective reports, and then applying the same index to patients with disorders of consciousness (DOCs).

METHODS:

The benchmark population encompassed 150 healthy controls and communicative brain-injured subjects in various states of conscious wakefulness, disconnected consciousness, and unconsciousness. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was performed to define an optimal cutoff for discriminating between the conscious and unconscious conditions. This cutoff was then applied to a cohort of noncommunicative DOC patients (38 in a minimally conscious state [MCS] and 43 in a vegetative state [VS]).

RESULTS:

We found an empirical cutoff that discriminated with 100% sensitivity and specificity between the conscious and the unconscious conditions in the benchmark population. This cutoff resulted in a sensitivity of 94.7% in detecting MCS and allowed the identification of a number of unresponsive VS patients (9 of 43) with high values of PCI, overlapping with the distribution of the benchmark conscious condition.

INTERPRETATION:

Given its high sensitivity and specificity in the benchmark and MCS population, PCI offers a reliable, independently validated stratification of unresponsive patients that has important physiopathological and therapeutic implications. In particular, the high-PCI subgroup of VS patients may retain a capacity for consciousness that is not expressed in behavior. 

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Funding

LUMINOUS – Studying, Measuring and Altering Consciousness through information theory in the electrical brain 686764
European Commission