Expedited conveyance of out-of-hospital-cardiac arrest patients with STEMI and shockable rhythms to Cardiac Arrest Centres − A feasibility pilot study of the British Cardiovascular Intervention Society conveyance algorithm

IF 6.5 1区 医学 Q1 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE Resuscitation Pub Date : 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2025.110491
Rupert F.G. Simpson , Thomas Johnson , Paul Rees , Guy Glover , Uzma Sajjad , Samer Fawaz , Sarosh Khan , Emma Beadle , Daryl Perilla , Maria Maccaroni , Christopher Cook , Marco Mion , Qiang Xue , Rohan Jagathesan , Gerald J. Clesham , Tom Quinn , Johannes Von Vopelius-Feldt , Sean Gallagher , Abdul Mozid , Ellie Gudde , Thomas R. Keeble
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and aims

Guidelines suggest non-traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) be conveyed to cardiac arrest centres (CAC). We hypothesised that (a) a pre-hospital conveyance algorithm based on initial presenting rhythm following OHCA is feasible and (b) that would demonstrate survival advantage.

Methods

This observational pilot study included all consecutive patients with OHCA from suspected cardiac aetiology from the county of Essex, United Kingdom from April 2022-April 2023. For the first 6 months, OHCA patients had conveyance as standard of care. For the next 6 months, consecutive OHCA patients with STEMI or initial shockable rhythm were directly conveyed to the CAC, initial non-shockable rhythm without STEMI continued to be taken to the nearest Emergency Department (BCIS protocol). Primary outcome was death from any cause at 30 days. Secondary outcome was survival with favourable neurological outcome.

Results

Of 330 patients (mean age 67.5 ± 13.1, 66% male), 162 patients were in the standard care group and 168 in the BCIS conveyance group. Algorithm implementation was associated with numerically lower all cause 30-day mortality [(81% vs 73%, RR 1.10 (95% CI 0.98–1.24) p = 0.10] and numerically higher 30-day survival with favourable neurological outcome [15% vs 19%, RR 1.05 (0.95–1.15), p = 0.38]. Post hoc analysis showed that the BCIS conveyance algorithm was associated with lower 30 day mortality in those with an initial shockable rhythm [(61% vs 41%, RR 1.5 (95% CI 1.05–2.13) p = 0.02 and in those with a MIRACLE2 score ≤ 5 [(63%% vs 38%, RR 0.59 (95% CI 0.61–0.86) p = 0.005].

Conclusions

The BCIS algorithm is feasible and did not impact overall mortality, but there is signal that direct conveyance of OHCA patients with an initial shockable rhythm and low MIRACLE2 score, to a dedicated CAC may improve survival.
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来源期刊
Resuscitation
Resuscitation 医学-急救医学
CiteScore
12.00
自引率
18.50%
发文量
556
审稿时长
21 days
期刊介绍: Resuscitation is a monthly international and interdisciplinary medical journal. The papers published deal with the aetiology, pathophysiology and prevention of cardiac arrest, resuscitation training, clinical resuscitation, and experimental resuscitation research, although papers relating to animal studies will be published only if they are of exceptional interest and related directly to clinical cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Papers relating to trauma are published occasionally but the majority of these concern traumatic cardiac arrest.
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