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Survival and Rearrest in out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Patients with Prehospital Return of Spontaneous Circulation: A Prospective Multi-Regional Observational Study

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Abstract
Objective: We aimed to determine the factors associated with rearrest after prehospital return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and examine the factors associated with survival despite rearrest.

Methods: We conducted a prospective multi-regional observational study of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients between August 2015 and July 2016. Patients received prehospital advanced cardiovascular life support performed by emergency medical technicians (EMTs). EMTs were directly supervised by medical directors (physicians) via real-time smartphone video calls [Smart Advanced Life Support (SALS)]. The study participants were categorized into rearrest (+) and rearrest (-) groups depending on whether rearrest occurred after prehospital ROSC. After rearrest, patients were further classified as survivors or non-survivors at discharge.

Results: SALS was performed in 1,711 OHCA patients. Prehospital ROSC occurred in 345 patients (20.2%); of these patients, 189 (54.8%) experienced rearrest [rearrest (+) group] and 156 did not experience rearrest [rearrest (-) group]. Multivariate analysis showed that a longer interval from collapse to first prehospital ROSC was independently associated with rearrest [odds ratio (OR) 1.081; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.050-1.114]. The presence of an initial shockable rhythm was independently associated with survival after rearrest (OR 6.920; 95% CI 2.749-17.422). As a predictor of rearrest, the interval from collapse to first prehospital ROSC (cut-off: 24 min) had a sensitivity of 77% and a specificity of 54% (AUC = 0.715 [95% CI 0.661-0.769]).

Conclusions: A longer interval from collapse to first prehospital ROSC was associated with rearrest, and an initial shockable rhythm was associated with survival despite the occurrence of rearrest. Emergency medical service providers and physicians should be prepared to deal with rearrest when pulses are obtained late in the resuscitation.
All Author(s)
J. H. Woo ; J. S. Cho ; C. A. Lee ; G. W. Kim ; Y. J. Kim ; H. J. Moon ; Y. J. Park ; K. M. Lee ; W. J. Jeong ; I. Choi ; H. J. Choi
Issued Date
2021
Type
Article
Keyword
Cardiopulmonary resuscitationemergency medical servicesrisk factorssurvivaltelemedicine
Publisher
National Association of EMS Physicians
ISSN
1090-3127 ; 1545-0066
Citation Title
Prehospital emergency care
Citation Volume
25
Citation Number
1
Citation Start Page
59
Citation End Page
66
Language(ISO)
eng
DOI
10.1080/10903127.2020.1733716
URI
http://schca-ir.schmc.ac.kr/handle/2022.oak/2045
Appears in Collections:
응급의학과 > 1. Journal Papers
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