| Literature DB >> 30201018 |
Clare Welbourn1, Nikolaos Efstathiou2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Brain injury can occur after cardiac arrest due to the effects of ischaemia and reperfusion. In serious cases this can lead to permanent disability. This risk must be considered when making decisions about terminating resuscitation. There are very specific rules for termination of resuscitation in the prehospital setting however a similar rule for resuscitation in hospital does not exist. The aim of this review was to explore the effects of duration of cardiopulmonary resuscitation on neurological outcome in survivors of both in-hospital and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest achieving return of spontaneous circulation in hospital.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced life support; Cardiac arrest; Cardiopulmonary resuscitation; Decision making; Literature review; Neurological outcome; Systematic review; Time factors
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30201018 PMCID: PMC6131783 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-018-0476-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Search strategy
| Database | Keywords | Limits | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cinahl (EbscoHost) | Resuscitation, Cardiopulmonary (MeSH) | duration | neurolog* | Jan 10 – Mar 16 |
| time | cogniti* | English | ||
| “cerebral performance” | ||||
| “function* outcome” | ||||
| Medline (OVID) | Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (MeSH) | duration | neurolog* | Jan 10 – Mar 16 |
| time | cogniti* | English | ||
| “cerebral performance” | ||||
| “function* outcome” | ||||
| PubMed (NCBI) | “Cardiopulmonary resuscitation” | duration | neurolog* | Jan 10 – Mar 16 |
| “Advanced cardiac life support” | time | cogniti* | English | |
| “Advanced life support” | “cerebral performance” | |||
| “function* outcome” | ||||
| Web of science | “Cardiopulmonary resuscitation” | duration | neurolog* | Jan 10 – Mar 16 |
| “Advanced cardiac life support” | time | cogniti* | English | |
| “Advanced life support” | “cerebral performance” | |||
| “function* outcome” | ||||
| Scopus | “Cardiopulmonary resuscitation” | duration | neurolog* | Jan 10 – Mar 16 |
| “Advanced cardiac life support” | time | cogniti* | English | |
| “Advanced life support” | “cerebral performance” | Health sciences | ||
| “function* outcome” | Life sciences |
Fig. 1Flowchart of the literature search and selection process
Eligibility criteria for the selection of papers
| Inclusion | Exclusion | |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Adults survivors of cardiac arrest receiving resuscitation in hospital | Animal studies; paediatrics |
| Intervention | CPR duration described as collapse to ROSC | Prehospital ROSC; additional interventions including but not limited to extracorporeal resuscitation, therapeutic hypothermia |
| Outcomes measured | Neurological outcome of survivors of CPR | Studies in which CPR duration is not compared with neurological outcome |
| Type of article | Research studies | Case studies |
| Language | English | Papers not published in English |
| Date | Published from 01/01/2010 | Published prior to 2010 |
Data extraction table for included studies
| Author, year of publication | Title | Country of origin | Aims/objectives | Study design | Data collection | n= | Age (yrs) median (IQR) or mean ± SD | Gender (% male) | Inclusion (Incl) Exclusion (Excl) | Type of CA | Location | Outcome measures | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chan et al., 2012 [ | A validated prediction tool for initial survivors of in-hospital cardiac arrest | USA (Not stated in study) | to develop a valid and clinically useful risk prediction tool among succesfully resuscitated patients with an IHCA, to estimate favourable neurological survival | Cohort study | National CA database (GWTG-R registry) | 42,957 | 68 (56–78) Mean 66 | 56 | Incl: 2000–2009; adults (≥18 yrs), achieved ROSC Excl: Arrest location ED, OT, post-op, procedural areas; incomplete data | IHCA | USA, multicentre, 551 hospitals | Neurologically favourable survival to discharge measured by CPC score | Duration of CPR is a good predictor of neurological status at discharge |
| Constant et al., 2014 [ | Predictors of functional outcome after intraoperative cardiac arrest | France | to identify factors associated with 90-day favourable functional outcomes in adults admitted to the ICU after succesful resuscitation of intra-operative CA | Cohort study | Medical records (Utstein format) interviewing patients, NOK, GP, neurologist | 140 | 60 (46–70) | 56.4 | Incl: 2000–2013; adults; received anaesthesia, admitted to ICU after succesful resuscitation | IOCA | France, multicentre, 11 hospital ICUs | Functional status at 90 days measured by CPC score | Shorter duration of CPR is associated with a more favourable outcome (CPC 1–2) |
| Goldberg et al., 2012 [ | Duration of resuscitation effors and survival after in-hospital cardiac arrest: an observational study | USA | to investigate whether duration of resuscitation attempt varies between hospitals and whether patients at hospitals that attempt resuscitation for longer have higher survival rates than those with shorter durations of resuscitation efforts | Cohort study | National CA database (GWTG-R registry) | 64,339 (8724 with CPC score) | 69 (57–78) | 55.8 | Incl: 2000–2008; adults (≥18 yrs); first CA during inpatient stay Excl: ICD; arrest location ED, OT, post-op, procedural areas, rehab areas; <2 mins arrest; incomplete data | IHCA | USA, multicentre, 435 hospitals | Neurological status at discharge measured by CPC score | No significant link between duration of CPR and neurological outcome |
| Iqbal et al., 2015 [ | Predictors of survival and favourable outcomes after an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in patients systematically brought to a dedicated heart attack cener (from the Harefield cardiac arrest study) | UK | to determine the predictors of favourable functional status at discharge and long-term survival in patients experiencing out of hospital CA who are brought to a dedicated heart attack centre | Cohort study | National research database (Utstein-style template) Case notes reviewed for data on functional status | 174 | 65 (56–65) | 79.9 | Incl: 2011–2013 | OHCA | UK, single site, dedicated heart attack centre | Functional status at discharge measured by mRS | Shorter duration of CPR is a powerful predictor of favourable functional outcome at discharge. |
| Reynolds et al., 2013 [ | Duration of resuscitation effors and functional outcome after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest when should we change to novel therapies? | USA | to estimate the dynamic probability of survival and functional recovery as a function of resuscitation effort duration to identify when to use novel therapies | Cohort study | Hospital CA database (Utstein-style template) | 1014 | Mean 65.2 | 57.7 | Incl: 2005–2011; adults (≥18 yrs) | Non-traumatic OHCA | USA, single site, ED | Functional status at discharge measured by mRS | Shorter duration of CPR is independantly associated with survival to d/c with a favourable outcome (mRs of 0–3) |
| Vancini-Campanharo et al., 2015 [ | One-year follow-up of neurological status of patients after cardiac arrest seen at the emergency room of a teaching hospital | Brazil | to describe neurological status and associated factors of survivors after CA, upon discharge and at six and twelve month follow ups | Cohort study | Utstein-style recording of consecutive IHCAs Neurological status evaluated with patient, family or guardian | 16 | not stated | not stated | Incl: 2011–2012; adults (≥17 yrs); resuscitated in ED; survivors to discharge | OHCA | Brazil, single site, city hospital ED | Neurological status at discharge, 1, 6 and 12 months measured by CPC score | No significant link between duration of CPR and neurological outcome |
| Xue et al., 2013 [ | Factors influencing outcomes after cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the emergency department | China | to assess the factors influencing outcome of CPR in ED | Cohort study | Hospital registry Utstein-style template | 725 | 46.94 ± 19.05 | 71.6 | Incl: 2005–2011; adults (≥16 yrs) | IHCA and OHCA | China, single site, city hospital ED | Neurologically favourable survival to discharge measured by CPC score | CPR ≤15mins had significantly higher percentage of survivors with a neurologically favourable outcome |
Abbreviations: CA cardiac arrest, CPC cerebral performance category, CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation, d/c discharge, ED emergency department, GWTG-R get with the guidelines-resuscitation, ICD implantable cardioverter defibrillator, ICU intensive care unit, IHCA in hospital cardiac arrest, IOCA intra-operative cardiac arrest, mRS modified Rankin scale, NOK next of kin, OHCA out of hospital cardiac arrest, OT operating theatre, post-op post-operative areas, ROSC return of spontatneous circulation
Quality appraisal tool
| Research question | Are the research question and objectives clearly stated? |
|---|---|
| Recruitment | Are the recruitment methods and study population clearly described? |
| Baseline measured | Was the outcome of interest measured prior to exposure to gain a baseline for the participants? Was this accounted for when measuring the outcome? |
| Similar cohorts | Were eligibility criteria applied uniformly across cohorts and all participants recruited from the same or similar population? |
| Sample size | Is there a sample size justification, power description, or variance and effect estimates provided? |
| Causation | Was the exposure assessed prior to outcome measurement? |
| Time-frame | Was there sufficient time-frame to see an effect? |
| Exposure levels | Did the study examine different levels of the exposure of interest? (i.e. multiple categories of exposure or exposure measured as a continuous variable)? |
| Exposure measurement | Were the exposures (independent variables) measured in a way that minimised bias? Were they clearly defined, valid, reliable, and implemented consistently across all study participants? |
| Outcome measurement | Were the outcomes (dependent variables) measured in a way that minimised bias? Were they clearly defined, valid, reliable, and implemented consistently across all study participants? |
| Blinding | Were assessors blinded to exposure? (Where researchers are using data already collected, this would be yes) |
| Confounders | Were key potential confounding variables identified and controlled for in statistical analysis? (i.e. were regression models used?) |
Quality appraisal outcomes
| Author, year | Research question | Recruitment | Baseline measured | Similar cohorts | Sample size | Causation | Time-frame | Exposure levels | Exposure measurement | Outcome measurement | Blinding | Confounders | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chan et al., 2012 [ | y | y | y | y | n | y | y | y | y | y | y | y | 11 |
| Constant et al., 2014 [ | y | y | unclear | y | n | y | y | y | y | y | unclear | y | 9 |
| Goldberger et al., 2012 [ | y | y | unclear | y | n | y | y | y | y | y | y | y | 10 |
| Iqbal et al., 2015 [ | y | y | unclear | y | n | y | y | y | y | y | y | y | 10 |
| Reynolds et al., 2013 [ | y | y | unclear | y | n | y | y | y | y | y | y | y | 10 |
| Vancini-Campanharo et al., 2015 [ | y | n | y | y | n | y | y | y | y | y | unclear | n | 8 |
| Xue et al., 2013 [ | y | n | unclear | y | n | y | y | n | y | y | y | y | 8 |