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Prognostic Indicators of Survival Following Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in Patients With Cardiac Arrest

Conditions
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Registration Number
NCT03597425
Lead Sponsor
First Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-Sen University
Brief Summary

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) occurs approximately 200,000 times/yr in hospitals in the UnitedStates, with 18% of patients surviving to discharge. Just over half of these survivors are neurologically intact or with mild defiits at the time of discharge. Do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders are used to withhold CPR from patients who are unlikely to benefi or for whom it is inconsistent with their treatment goals or personal preferences. It would be helpful to identify patients with a very low likelihood of survival to discharge neurologically intact or with mild defiits were they to experience cardiopulmonary arrest (CPA), so their physician can present the option of a DNR order. This information would also be useful anytime a patient raises the question of the likelihood of survival should they undergo CPA.The objective of this study was to determine key indicators for good outcome in patients with sudden cardiac arrest undergoing CPR and develop a prediction model to predict survival to hospital discharge in these patients.

Detailed Description

A CPR coordinator prospectively collected data for the CPR registry according to the Utstein-style guidelines. Te registry included the following information:

demographic data, comorbidities, whether the arrest was witnessed, the incidence of suspected or confrmed trauma, presumed arrest time; presence of bystander CPR, frst documented arrest rhythm by the emergency medical service (EMS) provider, any return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), presence of ECPR, the presence of return of spontaneous heart beating (ROSB) after CPR, presumed cause of arrest; the application of therapeutic hypothermia and the use of coronary angiography(CAG) or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI),24-hour survival, the presence of ROSC more than 20 min, hospital length of stay (LOS), survival to hospital discharge,Glasgow-Pittsburgh cerebral performance category (CPC) score at discharge, and the fnal diagnosis at discharge. Te comorbidity score was calculated using the Charlson comorbidity index. Te duration of CPR was defned as the time interval from the frst chest compression provided by healthcare providers to the termination of resuscitation eforts due to ROSC (more than 20 min),ROSB after CPR, or a declaration of death. A favorable neurologic outcome was defned as a CPC score of 1 or 2 on the fve-category scale.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
120
Inclusion Criteria
  • age more than 18 years,
  • sudden arrest with potentially reversible causes,
  • a short no fow time (time interval from presumed arrest to CPR initiation)
  • even for unwitnessed arrests
Exclusion Criteria
  • presence of a terminal illness or malignancy, severe irreversible neurologic defcit,
  • suspected or confrmed traumatic origin of arrest,
  • no informed consent from the family

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
indicators of survivalan average of 1 year

The survival outcome was analyzed with logstic regression

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Genglong Liu

🇨🇳

Shunde, Guangdong, China

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