Every one-minute delay in EMS on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers ROSC by 5%

Objective: To determine which aspects of prehospital care impact outcomes after pediatric cardiac arrest. Methods: In this study, the authors examine 5 years of consecutive data from their county emergency medical system (EMS), to identify predictors of good outcome after pediatric cardiac arrest, i...

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Main Authors: Paul Banerjee, Latha Ganti, Tej G. Stead, Ariel E. Vera, Raf Vittone, Paul E. Pepe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-03-01
Series:Resuscitation Plus
Subjects:
CPR
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666520420300631
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spelling doaj-ace069208eeb466ea5a2da3c198310b32021-05-24T04:32:16ZengElsevierResuscitation Plus2666-52042021-03-015100062Every one-minute delay in EMS on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers ROSC by 5%Paul Banerjee0Latha Ganti1Tej G. Stead2Ariel E. Vera3Raf Vittone4Paul E. Pepe5Polk County Fire Rescue, Bartow, FL, USA; University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA; Envision Physician Services, Plantation, FL, USAPolk County Fire Rescue, Bartow, FL, USA; University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA; Envision Physician Services, Plantation, FL, USA; Corresponding author.Brown University, Providence, RI, USAUniversity of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USAPolk County Fire Rescue, Bartow, FL, USAUniversity of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, TX, USAObjective: To determine which aspects of prehospital care impact outcomes after pediatric cardiac arrest. Methods: In this study, the authors examine 5 years of consecutive data from their county emergency medical system (EMS), to identify predictors of good outcome after pediatric cardiac arrest, including return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), survival to hospital admission (HA) and survival to hospital discharge (HD). Three logistic regression models were performed using JMP 14.1 Pro for Windows, each with the following nine predictors: age, sex, ventilation method (endotracheal intubation vs. supraglottic airway), initial rhythm (pulseless electrical activity vs. asystole), epinephrine administration, bystander treatment prior to EMS arrival, time from collapse to EMS arrival, automatic external defibrillator (AED) placement, and whether the arrest was witnessed. Odds ratio confidence intervals were calculated using the Wald method, and corresponding p-values were obtained with the likelihood ratio χ2 test. Results: From January 1, 2012 to December 31, 2016, there were 133 pediatric cardiac arrests, of which we had complete data on 109 patients for pediatric cardiac arrest. The median age was 8 months, with an IQR of 2.25–24 months, and a range of 0–108 months (0–9 years). There was return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in 20% of cases overall, with 16% making it to hospital admission, and 9% making it alive out of the hospital.The median time to EMS arrival for witnessed events was 10 min, with an interquartile range (IQR) of 6.5−16 min, and a range of 0−25 min. The median time to EMS arrival for unwitnessed events was 30 min, with an IQR of 19–62.5 min, and a range of 9−490 min.Predictors of ROSC included epinephrine administration (p = .00007), bystander treatment before EMS arrival (p = .0018), older age (p = .0025), shorter time to EMS arrival (p = .0048), and AED placement. Predictors of hospital admission included epinephrine NOT being administered (p = .0004), bystander treatment before EMS arrival (p = .0088), shorter time to EMS arrival (p = .0141), and AED placement (p = .0062). The only significant predictor of survival to hospital discharge alive that was identified was shorter time to EMS arrival (p = .0014), as there was insufficient data for many of the predictor variables in this analysis. Conclusion: Shorter time to EMS arrival from time of arrest, any bystander treatment prior to EMS arrival, and AED placement resulted in significantly higher rates of return of spontaneous circulation. Epinephrine administration significantly improved ROSC, but had the opposite effect on HA. Only shorter time to EMS arrival from time of arrest was significantly associated with survival to hospital discharge. Each additional minute for the EMS to arrive resulted in 5% decreased odds of ROSC and hospital admission, and 12% decreased odds of surviving to hospital discharge.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666520420300631Pediatric cardiac arrestResuscitationCPR
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul Banerjee
Latha Ganti
Tej G. Stead
Ariel E. Vera
Raf Vittone
Paul E. Pepe
spellingShingle Paul Banerjee
Latha Ganti
Tej G. Stead
Ariel E. Vera
Raf Vittone
Paul E. Pepe
Every one-minute delay in EMS on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers ROSC by 5%
Resuscitation Plus
Pediatric cardiac arrest
Resuscitation
CPR
author_facet Paul Banerjee
Latha Ganti
Tej G. Stead
Ariel E. Vera
Raf Vittone
Paul E. Pepe
author_sort Paul Banerjee
title Every one-minute delay in EMS on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers ROSC by 5%
title_short Every one-minute delay in EMS on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers ROSC by 5%
title_full Every one-minute delay in EMS on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers ROSC by 5%
title_fullStr Every one-minute delay in EMS on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers ROSC by 5%
title_full_unstemmed Every one-minute delay in EMS on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers ROSC by 5%
title_sort every one-minute delay in ems on-scene resuscitation after out-of-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest lowers rosc by 5%
publisher Elsevier
series Resuscitation Plus
issn 2666-5204
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Objective: To determine which aspects of prehospital care impact outcomes after pediatric cardiac arrest. Methods: In this study, the authors examine 5 years of consecutive data from their county emergency medical system (EMS), to identify predictors of good outcome after pediatric cardiac arrest, including return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), survival to hospital admission (HA) and survival to hospital discharge (HD). Three logistic regression models were performed using JMP 14.1 Pro for Windows, each with the following nine predictors: age, sex, ventilation method (endotracheal intubation vs. supraglottic airway), initial rhythm (pulseless electrical activity vs. asystole), epinephrine administration, bystander treatment prior to EMS arrival, time from collapse to EMS arrival, automatic external defibrillator (AED) placement, and whether the arrest was witnessed. Odds ratio confidence intervals were calculated using the Wald method, and corresponding p-values were obtained with the likelihood ratio χ2 test. Results: From January 1, 2012 to December 31, 2016, there were 133 pediatric cardiac arrests, of which we had complete data on 109 patients for pediatric cardiac arrest. The median age was 8 months, with an IQR of 2.25–24 months, and a range of 0–108 months (0–9 years). There was return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in 20% of cases overall, with 16% making it to hospital admission, and 9% making it alive out of the hospital.The median time to EMS arrival for witnessed events was 10 min, with an interquartile range (IQR) of 6.5−16 min, and a range of 0−25 min. The median time to EMS arrival for unwitnessed events was 30 min, with an IQR of 19–62.5 min, and a range of 9−490 min.Predictors of ROSC included epinephrine administration (p = .00007), bystander treatment before EMS arrival (p = .0018), older age (p = .0025), shorter time to EMS arrival (p = .0048), and AED placement. Predictors of hospital admission included epinephrine NOT being administered (p = .0004), bystander treatment before EMS arrival (p = .0088), shorter time to EMS arrival (p = .0141), and AED placement (p = .0062). The only significant predictor of survival to hospital discharge alive that was identified was shorter time to EMS arrival (p = .0014), as there was insufficient data for many of the predictor variables in this analysis. Conclusion: Shorter time to EMS arrival from time of arrest, any bystander treatment prior to EMS arrival, and AED placement resulted in significantly higher rates of return of spontaneous circulation. Epinephrine administration significantly improved ROSC, but had the opposite effect on HA. Only shorter time to EMS arrival from time of arrest was significantly associated with survival to hospital discharge. Each additional minute for the EMS to arrive resulted in 5% decreased odds of ROSC and hospital admission, and 12% decreased odds of surviving to hospital discharge.
topic Pediatric cardiac arrest
Resuscitation
CPR
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666520420300631
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