Back to Search Start Over

Effect of intra-arrest trans-nasal evaporative cooling in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a pooled individual participant data analysis

Authors :
Taccone, Fabio
Hollenberg, Jacob
Forsberg, Sune
Truhlar, Anatolij
Jonsson, Martin
Annoni, Filippo
Gryth, Dan
Ringh, Mattias
Cuny, Jerome
Busch, Hans Jörg
Vincent, Jean Louis
Svensson, Leif
Nordberg, Per
Castren, Maaret
Eichwede, Frank
Mols, Pierre
Schwab, Tilmann
Vergnion, Michel
Storm, Christian
Pesenti, Antonio
Pachl, Jan
Guerisse, Fabien
Elste, Thomas
Roessler, Markus
Fritz, Harald
Durnez, Pieterjan
Goldstein, Patrick
Vermeersch, Nick
Higuet, Adeline
Jiménes, Francisco Carmona
Ortiz, Fernando Rosell
Williams, Julia
Desruelles, Didier
Creteur, Jacques
Dillenbeck, Emelie
Busche, Caroline
Konrad, David
Peterson, Johan
Clinicum
Department of Diagnostics and Therapeutics
HUS Emergency Medicine and Services
Source :
Critical care, 25 (1, Critical Care, Vol 25, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2021), Critical Care
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Randomized trials have shown that trans-nasal evaporative cooling initiated during CPR (i.e. intra-arrest) effectively lower core body temperature in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients. However, these trials may have been underpowered to detect significant differences in neurologic outcome, especially in patients with initial shockable rhythm. Methods: We conducted a post hoc pooled analysis of individual data from two randomized trials including 851 patients who eventually received the allocated intervention and with available outcome (“as-treated” analysis). Primary outcome was survival with favourable neurological outcome at hospital discharge (Cerebral Performance Category [CPC] of 1–2) according to the initial rhythm (shockable vs. non-shockable). Secondary outcomes included complete neurological recovery (CPC 1) at hospital discharge. Results: Among the 325 patients with initial shockable rhythms, favourable neurological outcome was observed in 54/158 (34.2%) patients in the intervention and 40/167 (24.0%) in the control group (RR 1.43 [confidence intervals, CIs 1.01–2.02]). Complete neurological recovery was observed in 40/158 (25.3%) in the intervention and 27/167 (16.2%) in the control group (RR 1.57 [CIs 1.01–2.42]). Among the 526 patients with initial non-shockable rhythms, favourable neurological outcome was in 10/259 (3.8%) in the intervention and 13/267 (4.9%) in the control group (RR 0.88 [CIs 0.52–1.29]; p = 0.67); survival and complete neurological recovery were also similar between groups. No significant benefit was observed for the intervention in the entire population. Conclusions: In this pooled analysis of individual data, intra-arrest cooling was associated with a significant increase in favourable neurological outcome in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients with initial shockable rhythms. Future studies are needed to confirm the potential benefits of this intervention in this subgroup of patients.<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Critical care, 25 (1, Critical Care, Vol 25, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2021), Critical Care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a274c555cba325a9295fdeb861ca7daa