2018 Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest termination of resuscitation with ongoing CPR An observational study yates2018.pdf

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Resuscitation
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/resuscitation
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest termination of resuscitation with ongoing
CPR: An observational study
E.J. Yatesa,⁎,1
, S. Schmidbauerb
, A.M. Smythc,d
, M. Wardd
, S. Dorriane
, A.N. Siriwardenaf
,
H. Fribergb
, G.D. Perkinsa
a
Critical Care Unit, Heartlands Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, West Midlands, UK
b
Lund University, Skåne University Hospital, Dept. of Clinical Sciences, Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Malmö, Sweden; Center for Cardiac Arrest at Lund University,
Lund University, Lund, Sweden
c
Warwick Clinical Trials Unit, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
d
West Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust, West Midlands, UK
e
Department of Emergency Medicine, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, West Midlands, UK
f
Community and Health Research Unit, School of Health and Social Care, College of Social Science, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UK
A R T I C L E I N F O
Keywords:
Cardiac arrest
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
OHCA
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
CPR
Termination of resuscitation
TOR
Ongoing CPR, observational
Universal prehospital termination of
resuscitation rule
Return of spontaneous circulation
ROSC
Survival to discharge
West Midlands
UK
Decision support techniques
A B S T R A C T
Introduction: Termination of resuscitation guidelines for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest can identify patients in
whom continuing resuscitation has little chance of success. This study examined the outcomes of patients
transferred to hospital with ongoing CPR. It assessed outcomes for those who would have met the universal
prehospital termination of resuscitation criteria (no shocks administered, unwitnessed by emergency medical
services, no return of spontaneous circulation).
Methods: A retrospective cohort study of consecutive adult patients who were transported to hospital with
ongoing CPR was conducted at three hospitals in the West Midlands, UK between September 2016 and
November 2017. Patient characteristics, interventions and response to treatment (ROSC, survival to discharge)
were identified.
Results: 227 (median age 69 years, 67.8% male) patients were identified. 89 (39.2%) met the universal pre-
hospital termination of resuscitation criteria. Seven (3.1%) were identified with a potentially reversible cause of
cardiac arrest. After hospital arrival, patients received few specialist interventions that were not available in the
prehospital setting. Most (n = 210, 92.5%) died in the emergency department. 17 were admitted (14 to intensive
care), of which 3 (1.3%) survived to hospital discharge. There were no survivors (0%) in those who met the
criteria for universal prehospital termination of resuscitation.
Conclusion: Overall survival amongst patients transported to hospital with ongoing CPR was very poor.
Application of the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation rule, in patients without obvious reversible
causes of cardiac arrest, would have allowed resuscitation to have been discontinued at the scene for 39.2% of
patients who did not survive.
Introduction
Ambulance services in England respond to over 60,000 out-of-hos-
pital cardiac arrests (OHCA), each year [1]. Resuscitation is attempted
in around half of cases and return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), at
time of hospital transfer, is achieved in only 25.8% [2]. Reported es-
timates for survival to hospital discharge and favourable neurological
outcomes are 9.4% and 8.5%, respectively [3]. Most survivors of OHCA
achieve ROSC early in the resuscitation attempt [4], whereas poor
survival is typical for patients in whom ROSC is not achieved and
transport to hospital with ongoing CPR is required [5].
Transportation with ongoing CPR has recognised risks for both pa-
tients and Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel. Interruptions
of CPR are associated with worse survival [6]. Previous studies have
demonstrated the inability to provide high quality manual CPR during
the extrication of patients on a stretcher, both down stairs and through
confined corridors [7]. Additionally, adverse CPR quality has been re-
cognised due to critical acceleration forces, occurring during ambu-
lance transport, particularly at slower speeds [8]. As such, extrication
and transportation to hospital may hinder resuscitation success versus
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2018.06.021
Received 7 May 2018; Received in revised form 10 June 2018; Accepted 15 June 2018
⁎
Corresponding author.
1
These authors contributed equally to this work.
E-mail address: elliotyatesj@gmail.com (E.J. Yates).
Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27
0300-9572/ © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
T
remaining on scene [9]. Furthermore, ongoing CPR during transport
typically requires the provider to be unrestrained. This increases the
risk of injury in the event of a collision [10], as well as potential injuries
due to high forces of acceleration and deceleration whilst travelling
unrestrained [11].
Termination of resuscitation (TOR) guidelines for OHCA have been
derived to identify patients in whom continuing resuscitation has little
chance of success. TOR at the scene of OHCA occurs in approximately
one third of cases in England [12]. In the UK, the Joint Royal Colleges
Ambulance Liaison Committee (JRCALC) Recognition of Life Extinct
(ROLE) Clinical Practice Guideline [13] informs clinicians responding
to OHCA of TOR decisions (Appendix 1). ROLE allows TOR if the pa-
tient remains asystolic after 20 min of advanced life support (ALS), in
the absence of a special circumstance (e.g. pregnancy, suspected poi-
soning or drug overdose). In patients not fulfilling the ROLE criteria,
continued resuscitation is expected.
Resuscitation Council (UK) guidelines suggest that there is little to
be gained from transporting patients to hospital, who have not obtained
ROSC on scene [14]. Basic life support (BLS), common to pre and in-
hospital settings, remains the key to successful resuscitation, over more
advanced procedures [6]. The universal prehospital termination of re-
suscitation clinical prediction rule [15,16] identifies patients, who de-
spite resuscitation attempts, do not achieve ROSC prior to transport and
do not require shocks, where the arrest was not witnessed by EMS
personnel. Prospective validation of this rule, among patients with
OHCA of presumed cardiac aetiology, demonstrated 100% positive
predictive value (PPV) for death, suggesting it may be reasonable to
stop resuscitation and avoid the risk and resource implications of
transfer to hospital with ongoing CPR [17].
This study sought to explore patient characteristics, interventions
provided and outcomes in patients transferred to hospital with ongoing
CPR. A secondary aim was to determine how many transported pa-
tients, would fulfil the universal prehospital termination of resuscita-
tion criteria.
Methods
Study design
The study was a retrospective cohort study. Consecutive patients
presenting in cardiac arrest between September 2016 and November
2017 to one of three NHS acute hospitals in the West Midlands, UK
were eligible for inclusion. This was a convenience sample based on the
availability of electronic patient records covering this period.
Setting
National Health Service (NHS) ambulance services are responsible
for prehospital resuscitation attempts in accordance with national
guidelines [14]. Ambulance service resuscitation includes advanced
airway management, drug administration (adrenaline and amiodarone
only) and external defibrillation. The ROLE criteria outcomes above
were in operation during the conduct of the study.
The hospitals included in this study serve a population of 1.2 million
[18], covering urban and rural settings. The hospitals provide access to
24/7 diagnostic imaging (echocardiography, CT scanning) and specia-
list teams (intensive care, cardiology [including percutaneous coronary
intervention (PCI) at one site]). None of the hospitals provide extra-
corporeal life support (e-CPR). Information about patient character-
istics, interventions provided and outcomes were extracted from rou-
tine electronic ambulance service and hospital records. The study was
assessed in accordance with the Health Research Authority Decision
Tool [19]. Institutional approval was granted by the Trust Audit and
Effectiveness team (approval number 4198).
Study population
Electronic records were screened to identify all patients aged ≥18
years who were transported to hospital following OHCA. Patients were
eligible for inclusion if they had a confirmed OHCA and were trans-
ported to hospital with ongoing CPR. Patients were excluded where
they had not experienced OHCA, the first cardiac arrest occurred during
ambulance transport to hospital, or where patients were transported
after ROSC with no need for ongoing CPR.
Data extraction
Patient characteristics, circumstances of the arrest, treatments ad-
ministered before and after arrival at hospital and outcomes (ROSC,
survival to discharge) were recorded in accordance with the Utstein
Resuscitation Registry Template [20]. Comorbidities, where present,
were listed by Charlson groupings [21], and neurological outcome (at
hospital discharge) according to Cerebral Performance Category (CPC)
[22].
Each case was assessed to determine if any special circumstances
(i.e. potentially reversible causes such as hypothermia, drug overdose,
Appendix 1) were present and whether the criteria for the universal
prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule were
met (no ROSC prior to transport, no shocks administered and arrest not
EMS witnessed) [17].
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using R (version 3.3.3).
Continuous variables were tested for normality by histogram inspection
and the Shapiro-Wilk test. For sample distribution testing between the
three groups, Kruskal-Wallis and one-way analysis of variance
(ANOVA) tests were used. Post hoc pairwise comparisons were per-
formed using Conover, further adjusted by the Holm family-wise error
rate (FWER) method. Fisher’s exact test with follow-up pairwise com-
parison of proportions, adjusted for multiple comparisons by Bonferroni
correction, was used for count data. P values of less than 0.05 were
considered to be statistically significant.
Results
576 patients were identified as potential cases of cardiac arrest, of
which 557 records were individually reviewed (Fig. 1). 330 patients
were excluded (either due to lack of confirmation of OHCA or lack of
ongoing CPR), leading to 227 eligible patients. 89 (39.2%) met the
universal prehospital termination of resuscitation criteria (Fig. 2) whilst
seven (3.1%) had an identified special circumstance (suspected poi-
soning or drug overdose accounted for six cases and pregnancy, one
case). Six (85.7%) of these special circumstance patients also fulfilled
the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation criteria. 137
(60.4%) met neither the universal prehospital termination of re-
suscitation criteria nor had an identified special circumstance. No cases
of traumatic cardiac arrest were identified.
Patient characteristics
The median age was 69 (IQR 56-79) years. Those in the Special
circumstance group were younger than both uTOR terminate
(p < 0.001) and Non-uTOR terminate (p < 0.001) groups. 154
(67.8%) patients were male, 114 (56.7%) received bystander CPR, 148
(65.2%) had comorbidities and 62 (27.3%) were living independently;
however none of these characteristics were significantly different be-
tween groups (Table 1, Supplementary Table 1). Home or residence was
the most common location of cardiac arrest in all groups (n = 160,
70.5%). Asystole was the most common presenting rhythm overall
(n = 82, 36.1%), significantly more likely in both uTOR terminate and
E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27
22
Special circumstance than Non-uTOR terminate (p < 0.001).
Neither on-scene (mean 38 min [SD 11]) nor in-transit (median
9 min [IQR 7-12]) resuscitation times were significantly different be-
tween groups (Supplementary Table 2), however when including am-
bulance response times, Non-uTOR terminate had longer call to scene
departure and call to hospital arrival times (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01,
respectively) than uTOR terminate.
Interventions provided before hospital arrival
Adrenaline was almost universally administered (n = 225, 99.1%)
at a median time between emergency call to first drug administration of
21 min (IQR 17-27). Only patients in the Non-uTOR terminate group
received prehospital defibrillations with a median of two shocks (IQR 1-
5) at a median time from call to first defibrillation of 11 min (IQR 8-15).
Supraglottic airway devices were the most common airway (n = 114,
50.2%), and peripheral intravenous cannulation, the most common
vascular access (n = 126, 55.5%), however no significant inter-group
differences were observed for either. Low rates of mechanical CPR were
observed (n = 1, 0.7%, Table 2).
Interventions provided after hospital arrival
After hospital arrival, patients received few specialist interventions
that were not available in the prehospital setting. 80 (35.2%) patients
received any kind of in-hospital intervention, with uTOR terminate
being significantly less likely than both Special circumstance and Non-
uTOR terminate (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively) to do so. The
Non-uTOR terminate group was more likely to receive echocardiography
(p < 0.05) and advanced airway support (p < 0.05) than uTOR ter-
minate, whilst Special circumstance patients were more likely than both
uTOR terminate (p < 0.01) and Non-uTOR terminate (p < 0.05) to re-
ceive non-JRCALC drugs (e.g. thrombolytic therapy, vasoactive drugs).
Other interventions in hospital were received by six (2.6%) patients
(more likely in Special circumstance than Non-uTOR terminate
[p < 0.05]). Such interventions included: intra-aortic balloon pump
insertion (n = 1), external cardiac pacing (n = 2), implantable cardio-
verter defibrillator insertion (n = 1), permanent pacemaker insertion
(n = 1) and peri-mortem Caesarian section (n = 1).
Patient outcomes
Overall patient outcomes were poor with an overall survival to
hospital discharge of 1.3% (Table 3). The Non-uTOR terminate group
was more likely than the uTOR terminate group to have ROSC before
(p < 0.001) and after hospital arrival (p < 0.01). Most (n = 210,
92.5%) patients died in the emergency department; median whole
group time from hospital arrival to TOR decision was 13 min (IQR 8-
20); this was significantly shorter in the uTOR terminate group than
either other group (p < 0.05). 17 (7.5%) patients were admitted to
Fig. 1. Flow chart of case identification and cohort grouping. 6 of 7 (85.7%) patients in the Special circumstance group also fulfilled the universal prehospital
termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule criteria.
E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27
23
hospital of which 14 (82.4%) were to intensive care (including 3 pa-
tients from the uTOR terminate group). No Special circumstance patients
were admitted to hospital. The electronic supplementary materials
(Supplementary Tables 3 and 4) detail cause of death and time from
ROSC to withdrawal of treatment.
The three (1.3%) survivors all had VF as the presenting rhythm,
received between 5–8 shocks prehospitally and underwent cardiac ca-
theterisation in hospital. All three patients were discharged home with
a positive neurological outcome. No patients from the uTOR terminate
group survived to hospital discharge; the universal prehospital termi-
nation of resuscitation rule therefore correctly identified non-survivors
in this cohort with a PPV of 100% (95% CI 97.6–100.0%).
Discussion
The main finding of this study was of poor overall survival (1.3%)
amongst patients transported to hospital with ongoing CPR following
OHCA. Few patients received an in-hospital therapeutic (versus diag-
nostic) intervention that was not available in the prehospital setting.
The universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical predic-
tion rule correctly predicted universally fatal outcomes for patients
meeting all criteria for termination (0% survival). If the universal
prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule was
applied at the scene, the number transported to hospital would have
reduced by 40%.
This study identified limited benefits from transport to hospital with
ongoing CPR. With the exception of three patients with shock-re-
fractory VF, outcomes were universally fatal. The decision to transport
a patient with ongoing CPR must balance the risks and benefits of such
a decision. With little to gain, risks to both patient and emergency
medical providers associated with the transfer of a patient with ongoing
CPR weigh heavy. The act of transferring the patient from the scene of
the cardiac arrest to the ambulance and then to hospital may lead to
reduction in the quality of CPR [23]. Some observational studies have
reported reduced chest compression depth and more interruptions
during ambulance transport compared to resuscitation at the site of the
cardiac arrest [24–26] although this is not universally observed [27].
Un-restrained ambulance staff are at risk of musculoskeletal injuries
from acceleration forces during emergency ambulance transport [8].
Emergency ambulance transfers place ambulance staff and others at risk
of death or serious injury (300 crashes resulting in 500 injuries and 3–5
fatalities per year) [28]. Transfer to hospital also impacts emergency
department space and staff resources; it separates the patient from the
family and displaces them to a busy and unfamiliar environment. De-
spite the best efforts of ED staff it is often difficult to provide the family
with a quiet, dignified environment.
The universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical pre-
diction rule was originally derived from Canadian OHCA data, yielding
separate rules for BLS [16] and ALS [15] response. Subsequent pro-
spective validation (expanded across North America in 2415 patients)
[17] simplified the rule, by suggesting the three BLS criteria had 100%
PPV for death. Prospective validation in other countries, including
Japan (11,505 patients [29]) and Canada (2421 patients [30]) have
remained consistent, supporting the generalisability of this clinical
prediction rule for all OHCA of presumed cardiac origin. While our
results show some promise for the utilisation of this rule also in a wider
Fig. 2. Venn diagram representing cross-over between each of the three universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule variables and
showing relative patient counts (and %) in each.
E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27
24
OHCA context, this finding has to be interpreted with caution due to the
low number of cases with non-cardiac causes of arrest in this study’s
population.
Extrapolating data from the national out of hospital cardiac arrest
registry [2] indicates that there would have been approximately 800
cardiac arrests in the population served by these hospitals during the
study period. Applying the findings of this study gives an overall
transport rate with ongoing CPR of 28% of resuscitation attempts. If
these figures are scaled up across the UK (where there are approxi-
mately 30,000 OHCAs with attempted resuscitation, each year [1]), it
indicates that there are approximately 8400 emergency transports with
ongoing CPR, from which our results indicate there may be as little as
110 survivors. Application of the universal TOR clinical prediction rule
could identify 3290 cases that were transported to hospital, in spite of
there being no realistic chance of survival.
This study has the following limitations. Firstly, the study was
conducted at three hospital centres, all of which were served by a single
ambulance service; consequently the generalisability of the findings to
the rest of the UK is unexplored. Secondly, the study had a relatively
small sample size (n = 227), with very few special circumstances
(n = 7). The derived universal prehospital termination of resuscitation
clinical prediction rule PPV confidence interval is relatively wide when
considering futility decisions. Thirdly, ongoing CPR determination re-
quired inferences from case notes and timings; therefore, a minority of
patients may have been inappropriately included. Fourthly, the vul-
nerability of cardiac arrest TOR rules to self-fulfilling prophecy is re-
cognised [31]; earlier TOR for certain patient groups, irrespective of
reason, will directly lead to poorer prognosis in that group. This posi-
tive feedback vulnerability may have influenced the interventions re-
ceived and outcomes of patients with unfavourable prognostic factors in
this study. Fifthly, we did not measure the quality of CPR during am-
bulance transfer so the inference about impaired quality drawn from
other studies was not formally assessed. Finally, the number of patients
with potentially reversible causes of cardiac arrest in this study was
small, which limits the certainty that these results are generalisable to
this patient group.
Table 1
Patient characteristics, separated by cohortgroup. Bystander CPR only relevant
to patients without EMS witnessed OHCA (n = 201). Bystander AED usage only
relevant to those who received bystander CPR.
Characteristic
[As count (%)
unless otherwise
stated]
uTOR
terminate
group
n = 83
Non-uTOR
terminate
group
n = 137
Special
circumstance
group
n = 7
P Value
Age
Median (IQR)
70 (57-79) 70 (58-79) 34 (31-38) < 0.001
Male gender 51 (61.4) 97 (70.8) 6 (85.7) 0.249
Arrest witnessed
•Bystander
witnessed
49 (59.0) 75 (54.7) 3 (42.9) 0.650
•EMS witnessed 0 (0) 26 (19.0) 0 (0) < 0.001
•Unwitnessed 34 (41.0) 36 (26.3) 4 (57.1) 0.023†
Bystander CPR 42 (50.6) 67 (60.4) 5 (71.4) 0.295
Bystander AED
usage
4 (9.5) 7 (10.4) 1 (20.0) 0.550
First monitored
rhythm
•VF 0 (0) 57 (41.6) 0 (0) < 0.001
•VT 0 (0) 2 (1.5) 0 (0) 0.557
•PEA 37 (44.6) 41 (29.9) 0 (0) 0.011a
•Asystole 42 (50.6) 33 (24.1) 7 (100) < 0.001
•AED non-
shockable
2 (2.4) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 0.598
•AED shockable 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000
•Unknown 2 (2.4) 2 (1.5) 0 (0)
Arrest location
•Home /
residence
59 (71.1) 96 (70.1) 5 (71.4) 1.000
•Industrial /
workplace
1 (1.2) 2 (1.5) 0 (0) 1.000
•Street /
highway
11 (13.3) 20 (14.6) 1 (14.3) 0.937
•Public building 6 (7.2) 5 (3.6) 1 (14.3) 0.181
•Assisted living
/ nursing
home
5 (6.0) 13 (9.5) 0 (0) 0.695
•Educational
institution
1 (1.2) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0.396
•Other 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000
Pathogenesis
•Medical 82 (98.8) 136 (99.3) 1 (14.3) < 0.001
•Drug overdose 0 (0) 0 (0) 6 (85.7) < 0.001
•Asphyxial 1 (1.2) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000
a
Statistically significant inter-group distribution testing, though post hoc
pairwise comparisons not statistically significant. Abbreviations: IQR
(Interquartile Range), EMS (Emergency Medical Services), AED (Automated
External Defibrillator), VF (Ventricular Fibrillation), VT (Ventricular
Tachycardia), PEA (Pulseless Electrical Activity).
Table 2
Interventions provided, separated by cohort group. Abbreviations: OPA (Oro-
Pharyngeal Airway), SAD (Supraglottic Airway Device), ETT (Endotracheal
Tube), IV (Intravenous), IO (Intraosseous), CT (Computerised Tomography),
TTM (Targeted Temperature Management), JRCALC (Joint Royal Colleges
Ambulance Liaison Committee).
Characteristic
[As count (%) unless
otherwise stated]
uTOR
terminate
group
n = 83
Non-uTOR
terminate
group
n = 137
Special
circumstance
group
n = 7
P Value
Interventions before hospital arrival
Drugs given
•Adrenaline 83 (100) 135 (98.5) 7 (100) 0.557
•Amiodarone 0 (0) 49 (35.8) 0 (0) < 0.001
•None given 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000
•Unknown 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0)
Airway control
•None 1 (1.2) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000
•OPA 6 (7.2) 2 (1.5) 0 (0) 0.086
•SAD 36 (43.4) 75 (54.7) 3 (42.9) 0.249
•ETT 38 (45.8) 55 (40.1) 4 (57.1) 0.505
•Unknown 2 (2.4) 4 (2.9) 0 (0)
Vascular access
•Peripheral IV 46 (55.4) 78 (56.9) 2 (28.6) 0.378
•IO 35 (42.2) 54 (39.4) 5 (71.4) 0.256
•Unknown 2 (2.4) 5 (3.6) 0 (0)
Mechanical CPR 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000
Number of shocks
Median (IQR)
0 (0-0) 2 (1-5) 0 (0-0) < 0.001
Interventions after hospital arrival
Reperfusion
•Cardiac
catheterisation
1 (1.2) 10 (7.3) 0 (0) 0.126
•Thrombolysis 0 (0) 7 (5.1) 0 (0) 0.090
Radiological
•Echocardiogram 10 (12.0) 36 (26.3) 1 (14.3) < 0.05
•Ultrasound scan 0 (0) 3 (2.2) 0 (0) 0.356
•CT scan 3 (3.6) 11 (8.0) 0 (0) 0.460
Airway and
respiratory
•Advanced airway 5 (6.0) 27 (19.7) 1 (14.3) < 0.05
•Chest drain 0 (0) 4 (2.9) 0 (0) 0.383
Additional
intensive care
•Mechanical CPR 0 (0) 3 (2.2) 0 (0) 0.356
•TTM / Re-
warming
1 (1.2) 8 (5.8) 0 (0) 0.304
•Non-JRCALC
drugs
6 (7.2) 20 (14.6) 4 (57.1) < 0.001
•Blood transfusion 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000
Other interventions 2 (2.4) 2 (1.5) 2 (28.6) < 0.05
E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27
25
Future research
This study provides findings which have the potential to influence
resuscitation practice. The next steps are to confirm the generalisability
of the findings to the whole population with a UK-wide study. This
expansion should be supplemented by qualitative work addressing the
acceptability of on scene termination of resuscitation, from both a pa-
tient and EMS personnel perspective. The potential for organ donation
following unsuccessful resuscitation creates an ethical dilemma; in-
creasing on scene TOR may result in reduced donation. Consequently,
further work is required to explore such associations. Finally, although
outside the scope of this study (which examined only patients who were
transported to hospital), recent observational data suggest that a 20 min
window for termination of resuscitation may be premature [32]. Fur-
ther work to explore the effects of extending the 20 min window for
ROLE requires further study.
Conclusion
Overall survival amongst patients transported to hospital with on-
going CPR was very poor. Application of the universal prehospital
termination of resuscitation rule, in patients without obvious reversible
causes of cardiac arrest, would have allowed resuscitation to have been
discontinued at the scene for 39.2% of patients who did not survive.
Conflicts of interest
We wish to draw the attention of the Editor to the following facts,
which may be considered as potential conflicts of interest:
•Perkins GD is an editor for Resuscitation Journal
•Yates EJ, Schmidbauer S, Smyth AM, Ward M, Dorrian S,
Siriwardena AN, Friberg H declare no conflicts of interest
We wish to confirm that there has been no significant financial
support for this work that could have influenced its outcome.
We confirm that the manuscript has been read and approved by all
named authors and that there are no other persons who satisfied the
criteria for authorship but are not listed. We further confirm that the
order of authors listed in the manuscript has been approved by all of us.
We confirm that we have given due consideration to the protection
of intellectual property associated with this work and that there are no
impediments to publication, including the timing of publication, with
respect to intellectual property. In so doing we confirm that we have
followed the regulations of our institutions concerning intellectual
property.
We understand that the Corresponding Author is the sole contact for
the Editorial process (including Editorial Manager and direct commu-
nications with the office). He/she is responsible for communicating
with the other authors about progress, submissions of revisions and
final approval of proofs. We confirm that we have provided a current,
correct email address which is accessible by the Corresponding Author
and which has been configured to accept email from elliotyatesj@
gmail.com.
Acknowledgment
None.
Appendix A. JRCALC ROLE criteria
• Condition unequivocally associated with death:
○ Massive cranial or cerebral injury
○ Hemicorporectomy
○ Massive truncal injury
○ Decomposition or putrefaction
○ Incineration
○ Hypostasis
○ Rigor mortis
• Patient pulseless and apnoeic where one or more of the following
facts are established:
• Presence of DNAR / Validated Advanced Directive
• Expected death as a result of a terminal illness (eg. ambulance
transfer to hospice)
• Asystole with no evidence of CPR in past 15 min and no signs of:
○ Drowning
○ Hypothermia
○ Poisoning or overdose
○ Pregnancy
• Asystole and prolonged submersion (adults > 1 h, children > 1.5
h)
• Following 20 min of advanced life support (ALS) where all of the
following are confirmed:
• No palpable pulses
• No heart sounds
• No respiratory sounds
• Pupils fixed and dilated
• Asystole on ECG for 30 seconds
Appendix B. Supplementary data
Supplementary material related to this article can be found, in the
online version, at doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2018.06.
021.
References
[1] Perkins GD, Cooke MW. Variability in cardiac arrest survival: the NHS ambulance
service quality indicators. Emerg Med J 2012;29(January (1)):3–5.
[2] Hawkes C, Booth S, Ji C, Brace-McDonnell SJ, Whittington A, Mapstone J, et al.
Epidemiology and outcomes from out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in England.
Table 3
Patient outcomes, separated by cohort group. Abbreviations: ROSC (Return of Spontaneous Circulation), ITU (Intensive Therapy Unit), CPC (Cerebral Performance
Category).
Characteristic
[As count (%)]
uTOR terminate group
n = 83
Non-uTOR terminate group
n = 137
Special circumstance group
n = 7
P Value
ROSC
•Any ROSC before hospital arrival 5 (6.0)a
46 (33.6) 1 (14.3) < 0.001
•Any ROSC after hospital arrival 10 (12.0) 40 (29.2) 1 (14.3) < 0.01
Outcomes
•Admitted to hospital 3 (3.6) 14 (10.2) 0 (0) 0.215
•Admitted to ITU 3 (100) 11 (78.6) 0 (N/A) 1.000
•Admitted to ward 0 (0) 3 (21.4) 0 (N/A) 1.000
Survival
•Survival to hospital discharge 0 (0) 3 (2.2) 0 (0) 0.356
•CPC 1 or 2 0 (N/A) 3 (100) 0 (N/A) 1.000
a
Patients sustaining a ROSC in-transit to hospital (ie. before hospital arrival, though not on scene).
E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27
26
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E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27
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2018 Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest termination of resuscitation with ongoing CPR An observational study yates2018.pdf

  • 1. Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Resuscitation journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/resuscitation Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest termination of resuscitation with ongoing CPR: An observational study E.J. Yatesa,⁎,1 , S. Schmidbauerb , A.M. Smythc,d , M. Wardd , S. Dorriane , A.N. Siriwardenaf , H. Fribergb , G.D. Perkinsa a Critical Care Unit, Heartlands Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, West Midlands, UK b Lund University, Skåne University Hospital, Dept. of Clinical Sciences, Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Malmö, Sweden; Center for Cardiac Arrest at Lund University, Lund University, Lund, Sweden c Warwick Clinical Trials Unit, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK d West Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust, West Midlands, UK e Department of Emergency Medicine, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, West Midlands, UK f Community and Health Research Unit, School of Health and Social Care, College of Social Science, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UK A R T I C L E I N F O Keywords: Cardiac arrest Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest OHCA Cardiopulmonary resuscitation CPR Termination of resuscitation TOR Ongoing CPR, observational Universal prehospital termination of resuscitation rule Return of spontaneous circulation ROSC Survival to discharge West Midlands UK Decision support techniques A B S T R A C T Introduction: Termination of resuscitation guidelines for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest can identify patients in whom continuing resuscitation has little chance of success. This study examined the outcomes of patients transferred to hospital with ongoing CPR. It assessed outcomes for those who would have met the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation criteria (no shocks administered, unwitnessed by emergency medical services, no return of spontaneous circulation). Methods: A retrospective cohort study of consecutive adult patients who were transported to hospital with ongoing CPR was conducted at three hospitals in the West Midlands, UK between September 2016 and November 2017. Patient characteristics, interventions and response to treatment (ROSC, survival to discharge) were identified. Results: 227 (median age 69 years, 67.8% male) patients were identified. 89 (39.2%) met the universal pre- hospital termination of resuscitation criteria. Seven (3.1%) were identified with a potentially reversible cause of cardiac arrest. After hospital arrival, patients received few specialist interventions that were not available in the prehospital setting. Most (n = 210, 92.5%) died in the emergency department. 17 were admitted (14 to intensive care), of which 3 (1.3%) survived to hospital discharge. There were no survivors (0%) in those who met the criteria for universal prehospital termination of resuscitation. Conclusion: Overall survival amongst patients transported to hospital with ongoing CPR was very poor. Application of the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation rule, in patients without obvious reversible causes of cardiac arrest, would have allowed resuscitation to have been discontinued at the scene for 39.2% of patients who did not survive. Introduction Ambulance services in England respond to over 60,000 out-of-hos- pital cardiac arrests (OHCA), each year [1]. Resuscitation is attempted in around half of cases and return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), at time of hospital transfer, is achieved in only 25.8% [2]. Reported es- timates for survival to hospital discharge and favourable neurological outcomes are 9.4% and 8.5%, respectively [3]. Most survivors of OHCA achieve ROSC early in the resuscitation attempt [4], whereas poor survival is typical for patients in whom ROSC is not achieved and transport to hospital with ongoing CPR is required [5]. Transportation with ongoing CPR has recognised risks for both pa- tients and Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel. Interruptions of CPR are associated with worse survival [6]. Previous studies have demonstrated the inability to provide high quality manual CPR during the extrication of patients on a stretcher, both down stairs and through confined corridors [7]. Additionally, adverse CPR quality has been re- cognised due to critical acceleration forces, occurring during ambu- lance transport, particularly at slower speeds [8]. As such, extrication and transportation to hospital may hinder resuscitation success versus https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2018.06.021 Received 7 May 2018; Received in revised form 10 June 2018; Accepted 15 June 2018 ⁎ Corresponding author. 1 These authors contributed equally to this work. E-mail address: elliotyatesj@gmail.com (E.J. Yates). Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27 0300-9572/ © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. T
  • 2. remaining on scene [9]. Furthermore, ongoing CPR during transport typically requires the provider to be unrestrained. This increases the risk of injury in the event of a collision [10], as well as potential injuries due to high forces of acceleration and deceleration whilst travelling unrestrained [11]. Termination of resuscitation (TOR) guidelines for OHCA have been derived to identify patients in whom continuing resuscitation has little chance of success. TOR at the scene of OHCA occurs in approximately one third of cases in England [12]. In the UK, the Joint Royal Colleges Ambulance Liaison Committee (JRCALC) Recognition of Life Extinct (ROLE) Clinical Practice Guideline [13] informs clinicians responding to OHCA of TOR decisions (Appendix 1). ROLE allows TOR if the pa- tient remains asystolic after 20 min of advanced life support (ALS), in the absence of a special circumstance (e.g. pregnancy, suspected poi- soning or drug overdose). In patients not fulfilling the ROLE criteria, continued resuscitation is expected. Resuscitation Council (UK) guidelines suggest that there is little to be gained from transporting patients to hospital, who have not obtained ROSC on scene [14]. Basic life support (BLS), common to pre and in- hospital settings, remains the key to successful resuscitation, over more advanced procedures [6]. The universal prehospital termination of re- suscitation clinical prediction rule [15,16] identifies patients, who de- spite resuscitation attempts, do not achieve ROSC prior to transport and do not require shocks, where the arrest was not witnessed by EMS personnel. Prospective validation of this rule, among patients with OHCA of presumed cardiac aetiology, demonstrated 100% positive predictive value (PPV) for death, suggesting it may be reasonable to stop resuscitation and avoid the risk and resource implications of transfer to hospital with ongoing CPR [17]. This study sought to explore patient characteristics, interventions provided and outcomes in patients transferred to hospital with ongoing CPR. A secondary aim was to determine how many transported pa- tients, would fulfil the universal prehospital termination of resuscita- tion criteria. Methods Study design The study was a retrospective cohort study. Consecutive patients presenting in cardiac arrest between September 2016 and November 2017 to one of three NHS acute hospitals in the West Midlands, UK were eligible for inclusion. This was a convenience sample based on the availability of electronic patient records covering this period. Setting National Health Service (NHS) ambulance services are responsible for prehospital resuscitation attempts in accordance with national guidelines [14]. Ambulance service resuscitation includes advanced airway management, drug administration (adrenaline and amiodarone only) and external defibrillation. The ROLE criteria outcomes above were in operation during the conduct of the study. The hospitals included in this study serve a population of 1.2 million [18], covering urban and rural settings. The hospitals provide access to 24/7 diagnostic imaging (echocardiography, CT scanning) and specia- list teams (intensive care, cardiology [including percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) at one site]). None of the hospitals provide extra- corporeal life support (e-CPR). Information about patient character- istics, interventions provided and outcomes were extracted from rou- tine electronic ambulance service and hospital records. The study was assessed in accordance with the Health Research Authority Decision Tool [19]. Institutional approval was granted by the Trust Audit and Effectiveness team (approval number 4198). Study population Electronic records were screened to identify all patients aged ≥18 years who were transported to hospital following OHCA. Patients were eligible for inclusion if they had a confirmed OHCA and were trans- ported to hospital with ongoing CPR. Patients were excluded where they had not experienced OHCA, the first cardiac arrest occurred during ambulance transport to hospital, or where patients were transported after ROSC with no need for ongoing CPR. Data extraction Patient characteristics, circumstances of the arrest, treatments ad- ministered before and after arrival at hospital and outcomes (ROSC, survival to discharge) were recorded in accordance with the Utstein Resuscitation Registry Template [20]. Comorbidities, where present, were listed by Charlson groupings [21], and neurological outcome (at hospital discharge) according to Cerebral Performance Category (CPC) [22]. Each case was assessed to determine if any special circumstances (i.e. potentially reversible causes such as hypothermia, drug overdose, Appendix 1) were present and whether the criteria for the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule were met (no ROSC prior to transport, no shocks administered and arrest not EMS witnessed) [17]. Statistical analysis Statistical analysis was performed using R (version 3.3.3). Continuous variables were tested for normality by histogram inspection and the Shapiro-Wilk test. For sample distribution testing between the three groups, Kruskal-Wallis and one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) tests were used. Post hoc pairwise comparisons were per- formed using Conover, further adjusted by the Holm family-wise error rate (FWER) method. Fisher’s exact test with follow-up pairwise com- parison of proportions, adjusted for multiple comparisons by Bonferroni correction, was used for count data. P values of less than 0.05 were considered to be statistically significant. Results 576 patients were identified as potential cases of cardiac arrest, of which 557 records were individually reviewed (Fig. 1). 330 patients were excluded (either due to lack of confirmation of OHCA or lack of ongoing CPR), leading to 227 eligible patients. 89 (39.2%) met the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation criteria (Fig. 2) whilst seven (3.1%) had an identified special circumstance (suspected poi- soning or drug overdose accounted for six cases and pregnancy, one case). Six (85.7%) of these special circumstance patients also fulfilled the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation criteria. 137 (60.4%) met neither the universal prehospital termination of re- suscitation criteria nor had an identified special circumstance. No cases of traumatic cardiac arrest were identified. Patient characteristics The median age was 69 (IQR 56-79) years. Those in the Special circumstance group were younger than both uTOR terminate (p < 0.001) and Non-uTOR terminate (p < 0.001) groups. 154 (67.8%) patients were male, 114 (56.7%) received bystander CPR, 148 (65.2%) had comorbidities and 62 (27.3%) were living independently; however none of these characteristics were significantly different be- tween groups (Table 1, Supplementary Table 1). Home or residence was the most common location of cardiac arrest in all groups (n = 160, 70.5%). Asystole was the most common presenting rhythm overall (n = 82, 36.1%), significantly more likely in both uTOR terminate and E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27 22
  • 3. Special circumstance than Non-uTOR terminate (p < 0.001). Neither on-scene (mean 38 min [SD 11]) nor in-transit (median 9 min [IQR 7-12]) resuscitation times were significantly different be- tween groups (Supplementary Table 2), however when including am- bulance response times, Non-uTOR terminate had longer call to scene departure and call to hospital arrival times (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively) than uTOR terminate. Interventions provided before hospital arrival Adrenaline was almost universally administered (n = 225, 99.1%) at a median time between emergency call to first drug administration of 21 min (IQR 17-27). Only patients in the Non-uTOR terminate group received prehospital defibrillations with a median of two shocks (IQR 1- 5) at a median time from call to first defibrillation of 11 min (IQR 8-15). Supraglottic airway devices were the most common airway (n = 114, 50.2%), and peripheral intravenous cannulation, the most common vascular access (n = 126, 55.5%), however no significant inter-group differences were observed for either. Low rates of mechanical CPR were observed (n = 1, 0.7%, Table 2). Interventions provided after hospital arrival After hospital arrival, patients received few specialist interventions that were not available in the prehospital setting. 80 (35.2%) patients received any kind of in-hospital intervention, with uTOR terminate being significantly less likely than both Special circumstance and Non- uTOR terminate (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively) to do so. The Non-uTOR terminate group was more likely to receive echocardiography (p < 0.05) and advanced airway support (p < 0.05) than uTOR ter- minate, whilst Special circumstance patients were more likely than both uTOR terminate (p < 0.01) and Non-uTOR terminate (p < 0.05) to re- ceive non-JRCALC drugs (e.g. thrombolytic therapy, vasoactive drugs). Other interventions in hospital were received by six (2.6%) patients (more likely in Special circumstance than Non-uTOR terminate [p < 0.05]). Such interventions included: intra-aortic balloon pump insertion (n = 1), external cardiac pacing (n = 2), implantable cardio- verter defibrillator insertion (n = 1), permanent pacemaker insertion (n = 1) and peri-mortem Caesarian section (n = 1). Patient outcomes Overall patient outcomes were poor with an overall survival to hospital discharge of 1.3% (Table 3). The Non-uTOR terminate group was more likely than the uTOR terminate group to have ROSC before (p < 0.001) and after hospital arrival (p < 0.01). Most (n = 210, 92.5%) patients died in the emergency department; median whole group time from hospital arrival to TOR decision was 13 min (IQR 8- 20); this was significantly shorter in the uTOR terminate group than either other group (p < 0.05). 17 (7.5%) patients were admitted to Fig. 1. Flow chart of case identification and cohort grouping. 6 of 7 (85.7%) patients in the Special circumstance group also fulfilled the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule criteria. E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27 23
  • 4. hospital of which 14 (82.4%) were to intensive care (including 3 pa- tients from the uTOR terminate group). No Special circumstance patients were admitted to hospital. The electronic supplementary materials (Supplementary Tables 3 and 4) detail cause of death and time from ROSC to withdrawal of treatment. The three (1.3%) survivors all had VF as the presenting rhythm, received between 5–8 shocks prehospitally and underwent cardiac ca- theterisation in hospital. All three patients were discharged home with a positive neurological outcome. No patients from the uTOR terminate group survived to hospital discharge; the universal prehospital termi- nation of resuscitation rule therefore correctly identified non-survivors in this cohort with a PPV of 100% (95% CI 97.6–100.0%). Discussion The main finding of this study was of poor overall survival (1.3%) amongst patients transported to hospital with ongoing CPR following OHCA. Few patients received an in-hospital therapeutic (versus diag- nostic) intervention that was not available in the prehospital setting. The universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical predic- tion rule correctly predicted universally fatal outcomes for patients meeting all criteria for termination (0% survival). If the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule was applied at the scene, the number transported to hospital would have reduced by 40%. This study identified limited benefits from transport to hospital with ongoing CPR. With the exception of three patients with shock-re- fractory VF, outcomes were universally fatal. The decision to transport a patient with ongoing CPR must balance the risks and benefits of such a decision. With little to gain, risks to both patient and emergency medical providers associated with the transfer of a patient with ongoing CPR weigh heavy. The act of transferring the patient from the scene of the cardiac arrest to the ambulance and then to hospital may lead to reduction in the quality of CPR [23]. Some observational studies have reported reduced chest compression depth and more interruptions during ambulance transport compared to resuscitation at the site of the cardiac arrest [24–26] although this is not universally observed [27]. Un-restrained ambulance staff are at risk of musculoskeletal injuries from acceleration forces during emergency ambulance transport [8]. Emergency ambulance transfers place ambulance staff and others at risk of death or serious injury (300 crashes resulting in 500 injuries and 3–5 fatalities per year) [28]. Transfer to hospital also impacts emergency department space and staff resources; it separates the patient from the family and displaces them to a busy and unfamiliar environment. De- spite the best efforts of ED staff it is often difficult to provide the family with a quiet, dignified environment. The universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical pre- diction rule was originally derived from Canadian OHCA data, yielding separate rules for BLS [16] and ALS [15] response. Subsequent pro- spective validation (expanded across North America in 2415 patients) [17] simplified the rule, by suggesting the three BLS criteria had 100% PPV for death. Prospective validation in other countries, including Japan (11,505 patients [29]) and Canada (2421 patients [30]) have remained consistent, supporting the generalisability of this clinical prediction rule for all OHCA of presumed cardiac origin. While our results show some promise for the utilisation of this rule also in a wider Fig. 2. Venn diagram representing cross-over between each of the three universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule variables and showing relative patient counts (and %) in each. E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27 24
  • 5. OHCA context, this finding has to be interpreted with caution due to the low number of cases with non-cardiac causes of arrest in this study’s population. Extrapolating data from the national out of hospital cardiac arrest registry [2] indicates that there would have been approximately 800 cardiac arrests in the population served by these hospitals during the study period. Applying the findings of this study gives an overall transport rate with ongoing CPR of 28% of resuscitation attempts. If these figures are scaled up across the UK (where there are approxi- mately 30,000 OHCAs with attempted resuscitation, each year [1]), it indicates that there are approximately 8400 emergency transports with ongoing CPR, from which our results indicate there may be as little as 110 survivors. Application of the universal TOR clinical prediction rule could identify 3290 cases that were transported to hospital, in spite of there being no realistic chance of survival. This study has the following limitations. Firstly, the study was conducted at three hospital centres, all of which were served by a single ambulance service; consequently the generalisability of the findings to the rest of the UK is unexplored. Secondly, the study had a relatively small sample size (n = 227), with very few special circumstances (n = 7). The derived universal prehospital termination of resuscitation clinical prediction rule PPV confidence interval is relatively wide when considering futility decisions. Thirdly, ongoing CPR determination re- quired inferences from case notes and timings; therefore, a minority of patients may have been inappropriately included. Fourthly, the vul- nerability of cardiac arrest TOR rules to self-fulfilling prophecy is re- cognised [31]; earlier TOR for certain patient groups, irrespective of reason, will directly lead to poorer prognosis in that group. This posi- tive feedback vulnerability may have influenced the interventions re- ceived and outcomes of patients with unfavourable prognostic factors in this study. Fifthly, we did not measure the quality of CPR during am- bulance transfer so the inference about impaired quality drawn from other studies was not formally assessed. Finally, the number of patients with potentially reversible causes of cardiac arrest in this study was small, which limits the certainty that these results are generalisable to this patient group. Table 1 Patient characteristics, separated by cohortgroup. Bystander CPR only relevant to patients without EMS witnessed OHCA (n = 201). Bystander AED usage only relevant to those who received bystander CPR. Characteristic [As count (%) unless otherwise stated] uTOR terminate group n = 83 Non-uTOR terminate group n = 137 Special circumstance group n = 7 P Value Age Median (IQR) 70 (57-79) 70 (58-79) 34 (31-38) < 0.001 Male gender 51 (61.4) 97 (70.8) 6 (85.7) 0.249 Arrest witnessed •Bystander witnessed 49 (59.0) 75 (54.7) 3 (42.9) 0.650 •EMS witnessed 0 (0) 26 (19.0) 0 (0) < 0.001 •Unwitnessed 34 (41.0) 36 (26.3) 4 (57.1) 0.023† Bystander CPR 42 (50.6) 67 (60.4) 5 (71.4) 0.295 Bystander AED usage 4 (9.5) 7 (10.4) 1 (20.0) 0.550 First monitored rhythm •VF 0 (0) 57 (41.6) 0 (0) < 0.001 •VT 0 (0) 2 (1.5) 0 (0) 0.557 •PEA 37 (44.6) 41 (29.9) 0 (0) 0.011a •Asystole 42 (50.6) 33 (24.1) 7 (100) < 0.001 •AED non- shockable 2 (2.4) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 0.598 •AED shockable 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000 •Unknown 2 (2.4) 2 (1.5) 0 (0) Arrest location •Home / residence 59 (71.1) 96 (70.1) 5 (71.4) 1.000 •Industrial / workplace 1 (1.2) 2 (1.5) 0 (0) 1.000 •Street / highway 11 (13.3) 20 (14.6) 1 (14.3) 0.937 •Public building 6 (7.2) 5 (3.6) 1 (14.3) 0.181 •Assisted living / nursing home 5 (6.0) 13 (9.5) 0 (0) 0.695 •Educational institution 1 (1.2) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0.396 •Other 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000 Pathogenesis •Medical 82 (98.8) 136 (99.3) 1 (14.3) < 0.001 •Drug overdose 0 (0) 0 (0) 6 (85.7) < 0.001 •Asphyxial 1 (1.2) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000 a Statistically significant inter-group distribution testing, though post hoc pairwise comparisons not statistically significant. Abbreviations: IQR (Interquartile Range), EMS (Emergency Medical Services), AED (Automated External Defibrillator), VF (Ventricular Fibrillation), VT (Ventricular Tachycardia), PEA (Pulseless Electrical Activity). Table 2 Interventions provided, separated by cohort group. Abbreviations: OPA (Oro- Pharyngeal Airway), SAD (Supraglottic Airway Device), ETT (Endotracheal Tube), IV (Intravenous), IO (Intraosseous), CT (Computerised Tomography), TTM (Targeted Temperature Management), JRCALC (Joint Royal Colleges Ambulance Liaison Committee). Characteristic [As count (%) unless otherwise stated] uTOR terminate group n = 83 Non-uTOR terminate group n = 137 Special circumstance group n = 7 P Value Interventions before hospital arrival Drugs given •Adrenaline 83 (100) 135 (98.5) 7 (100) 0.557 •Amiodarone 0 (0) 49 (35.8) 0 (0) < 0.001 •None given 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000 •Unknown 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) Airway control •None 1 (1.2) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000 •OPA 6 (7.2) 2 (1.5) 0 (0) 0.086 •SAD 36 (43.4) 75 (54.7) 3 (42.9) 0.249 •ETT 38 (45.8) 55 (40.1) 4 (57.1) 0.505 •Unknown 2 (2.4) 4 (2.9) 0 (0) Vascular access •Peripheral IV 46 (55.4) 78 (56.9) 2 (28.6) 0.378 •IO 35 (42.2) 54 (39.4) 5 (71.4) 0.256 •Unknown 2 (2.4) 5 (3.6) 0 (0) Mechanical CPR 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000 Number of shocks Median (IQR) 0 (0-0) 2 (1-5) 0 (0-0) < 0.001 Interventions after hospital arrival Reperfusion •Cardiac catheterisation 1 (1.2) 10 (7.3) 0 (0) 0.126 •Thrombolysis 0 (0) 7 (5.1) 0 (0) 0.090 Radiological •Echocardiogram 10 (12.0) 36 (26.3) 1 (14.3) < 0.05 •Ultrasound scan 0 (0) 3 (2.2) 0 (0) 0.356 •CT scan 3 (3.6) 11 (8.0) 0 (0) 0.460 Airway and respiratory •Advanced airway 5 (6.0) 27 (19.7) 1 (14.3) < 0.05 •Chest drain 0 (0) 4 (2.9) 0 (0) 0.383 Additional intensive care •Mechanical CPR 0 (0) 3 (2.2) 0 (0) 0.356 •TTM / Re- warming 1 (1.2) 8 (5.8) 0 (0) 0.304 •Non-JRCALC drugs 6 (7.2) 20 (14.6) 4 (57.1) < 0.001 •Blood transfusion 0 (0) 1 (0.7) 0 (0) 1.000 Other interventions 2 (2.4) 2 (1.5) 2 (28.6) < 0.05 E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27 25
  • 6. Future research This study provides findings which have the potential to influence resuscitation practice. The next steps are to confirm the generalisability of the findings to the whole population with a UK-wide study. This expansion should be supplemented by qualitative work addressing the acceptability of on scene termination of resuscitation, from both a pa- tient and EMS personnel perspective. The potential for organ donation following unsuccessful resuscitation creates an ethical dilemma; in- creasing on scene TOR may result in reduced donation. Consequently, further work is required to explore such associations. Finally, although outside the scope of this study (which examined only patients who were transported to hospital), recent observational data suggest that a 20 min window for termination of resuscitation may be premature [32]. Fur- ther work to explore the effects of extending the 20 min window for ROLE requires further study. Conclusion Overall survival amongst patients transported to hospital with on- going CPR was very poor. Application of the universal prehospital termination of resuscitation rule, in patients without obvious reversible causes of cardiac arrest, would have allowed resuscitation to have been discontinued at the scene for 39.2% of patients who did not survive. Conflicts of interest We wish to draw the attention of the Editor to the following facts, which may be considered as potential conflicts of interest: •Perkins GD is an editor for Resuscitation Journal •Yates EJ, Schmidbauer S, Smyth AM, Ward M, Dorrian S, Siriwardena AN, Friberg H declare no conflicts of interest We wish to confirm that there has been no significant financial support for this work that could have influenced its outcome. We confirm that the manuscript has been read and approved by all named authors and that there are no other persons who satisfied the criteria for authorship but are not listed. We further confirm that the order of authors listed in the manuscript has been approved by all of us. We confirm that we have given due consideration to the protection of intellectual property associated with this work and that there are no impediments to publication, including the timing of publication, with respect to intellectual property. In so doing we confirm that we have followed the regulations of our institutions concerning intellectual property. We understand that the Corresponding Author is the sole contact for the Editorial process (including Editorial Manager and direct commu- nications with the office). He/she is responsible for communicating with the other authors about progress, submissions of revisions and final approval of proofs. We confirm that we have provided a current, correct email address which is accessible by the Corresponding Author and which has been configured to accept email from elliotyatesj@ gmail.com. Acknowledgment None. Appendix A. JRCALC ROLE criteria • Condition unequivocally associated with death: ○ Massive cranial or cerebral injury ○ Hemicorporectomy ○ Massive truncal injury ○ Decomposition or putrefaction ○ Incineration ○ Hypostasis ○ Rigor mortis • Patient pulseless and apnoeic where one or more of the following facts are established: • Presence of DNAR / Validated Advanced Directive • Expected death as a result of a terminal illness (eg. ambulance transfer to hospice) • Asystole with no evidence of CPR in past 15 min and no signs of: ○ Drowning ○ Hypothermia ○ Poisoning or overdose ○ Pregnancy • Asystole and prolonged submersion (adults > 1 h, children > 1.5 h) • Following 20 min of advanced life support (ALS) where all of the following are confirmed: • No palpable pulses • No heart sounds • No respiratory sounds • Pupils fixed and dilated • Asystole on ECG for 30 seconds Appendix B. Supplementary data Supplementary material related to this article can be found, in the online version, at doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2018.06. 021. References [1] Perkins GD, Cooke MW. Variability in cardiac arrest survival: the NHS ambulance service quality indicators. Emerg Med J 2012;29(January (1)):3–5. [2] Hawkes C, Booth S, Ji C, Brace-McDonnell SJ, Whittington A, Mapstone J, et al. Epidemiology and outcomes from out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in England. Table 3 Patient outcomes, separated by cohort group. Abbreviations: ROSC (Return of Spontaneous Circulation), ITU (Intensive Therapy Unit), CPC (Cerebral Performance Category). Characteristic [As count (%)] uTOR terminate group n = 83 Non-uTOR terminate group n = 137 Special circumstance group n = 7 P Value ROSC •Any ROSC before hospital arrival 5 (6.0)a 46 (33.6) 1 (14.3) < 0.001 •Any ROSC after hospital arrival 10 (12.0) 40 (29.2) 1 (14.3) < 0.01 Outcomes •Admitted to hospital 3 (3.6) 14 (10.2) 0 (0) 0.215 •Admitted to ITU 3 (100) 11 (78.6) 0 (N/A) 1.000 •Admitted to ward 0 (0) 3 (21.4) 0 (N/A) 1.000 Survival •Survival to hospital discharge 0 (0) 3 (2.2) 0 (0) 0.356 •CPC 1 or 2 0 (N/A) 3 (100) 0 (N/A) 1.000 a Patients sustaining a ROSC in-transit to hospital (ie. before hospital arrival, though not on scene). E.J. Yates et al. Resuscitation 130 (2018) 21–27 26
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