The capacity to integrate information across brain regions and sufficient diversity of neural activity is necessary for consciousness. In patients in a post-hypoxic ischemic coma, the integrity of the auditory processing network is indicative of chances of regaining consciousness. However, our understanding of how measures of integration and differentiation of auditory responses manifest across time of coma is limited. We investigated the temporal evolution of neural synchrony of auditory-evoked electroencephalographic (EEG) responses, measured via their phase-locking value (PLV), and of their neural complexity in unconscious post-hypoxic ischemic comatose patients. Our results show that the PLV was predictive of chances to regain consciousness within the first 40 h post-cardiac arrest, while its predictive value diminished over subsequent time after coma onset. This was due to changing trajectories of PLV over time of coma for non-survivors, while survivors had stable PLV. The complexity of EEG responses was not different between patients who regained consciousness and those who did not, but it significantly diminished over time of coma, irrespective of the patient's outcome. Our findings provide novel insights on the optimal temporal window for assessing auditory functions in post-hypoxic ischemic coma. They are of particular importance for guiding the implementation of quantitative techniques for prognostication and contribute to an evolving understanding of neural functions within the acute comatose state.