1. Emergency medical services employing intra-arrest transport less frequently for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest have higher survival and favorable neurological outcomes
- Author
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Sheldon Cheskes, Thomas D. Rea, Jim Christenson, Christopher B. Fordyce, Ian R. Drennan, Brian Twaites, Joshua C. Reynolds, Takahisa Kawano, Matthieu Heidet, Masashi Okubo, Frank X. Scheuermeyer, and Brian Grunau
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Emergency Medical Services ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Emergency Nursing ,Return of spontaneous circulation ,Logistic regression ,Out of hospital cardiac arrest ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hospital discharge ,Emergency medical services ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Patient Discharge ,3. Good health ,Clinical trial ,Logistic Models ,Quartile ,Emergency medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest - Abstract
There is substantial regional variation in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) survival. We investigated whether regional emergency medical services (EMS) intra-arrest transport (IAT) practices are associated with patient outcomes.We performed a secondary analysis of a multi-center North American clinical trial dataset, which enrolled EMS-treated adult OHCA cases from 49 regional population-based clusters. The exposure of interest was regional-level intra-arrest transport (IAT), calculated as the proportion of cases in each cluster transported to hospital prior to return of spontaneous circulation, examined as quartiles and as a continuous variable. Multilevel mixed-effects logistic regression modeling estimated the association between regional IAT with survival to hospital discharge and favorable neurologic status (modified Rankin Scale ≤ 3) at hospital discharge.Of 26,148 subjects (median age 68 years; 36% female; 23% shockable initial rhythm) 2424 (9.3%), survived to hospital discharge and 1993 (7.6%) had favourable neurological outcomes. Across regional clusters, IAT ranged from 0.84% to 75% (quartiles6.2%, 6.2-19.6%, 19.6-30.4%, and ≥30.4%). For each quartile, 13.3%, 7.9%, 7.4%, and 4.8% survived, and 10.4%, 7.8%, 7.4%, and 4.8% had favourable neurological status. Regional IAT (per 10% change) was associated with decreased probability of survival (AOR 0.86, 95% CI 0.82-0.91) and favorable neurological outcome (AOR 0.80, 95% CI 0.76-0.85).Treatment within a region that utilizes IAT less frequently was associated with improved clinical outcomes at hospital discharge. These findings may account for some of the known regional variation in OHCA outcomes.
- Published
- 2021