| Literature DB >> 31420058 |
Ryo Yamamoto1, Masaru Suzuki2, Kei Hayashida3, Jo Yoshizawa3, Atsushi Sakurai4, Nobuya Kitamura5, Takashi Tagami6, Taka-Aki Nakada7, Munekazu Takeda8, Junichi Sasaki3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The beneficial effect of epinephrine during resuscitation from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has been inconclusive, and potential harm has been suggested, particularly in trauma victims. Although no significant improvement in neurological outcomes has been found among resuscitated patients using epinephrine, including trauma patients, the use of epinephrine is recommended in the Advanced Trauma Life Support protocol. Given that the use of vasopressors was reported to be associated with increased mortality in patients with massive bleeding, the undesirable effects of epinephrine during the resuscitation of traumatic OHCA should be elucidated. We hypothesised that resuscitation with epinephrine would increase mortality in patients with OHCA following trauma.Entities:
Keywords: Epinephrine; Mortality; Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; Trauma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31420058 PMCID: PMC6698003 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-019-0657-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the study. A total of 1152 patients with traumatic OHCA were identified; among them, 1030 were included in the analyses, and 356 (178 pairs) were identified in the propensity score matching. Abbreviations: OHCA = out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
Standardised differences of patients with traumatic OHCA
| Before Matching | After Matching | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Epinephrine | no-Epinephrine | Standardised Difference | Epinephrine | no-Epinephrine | Standardised Difference | |||||
| Case | 822 | 208 | 178 | 178 | ||||||
| Age, years, median (IQR) | 54 | (33) | 54 | (30) | 4.4% | 55 | (30) | 54 | (31) | 2.5% |
| missing data | 59 | (7.2%) | 18 | (8.7%) | ||||||
| Sex, male, n (%) | 581 | (70.7%) | 133 | (63.9%) | 14.4% | 124 | (70.0%) | 109 | (61.2%) | 17.8% |
| missing data | 0 | (0%) | 0 | (0%) | ||||||
| Witness, n (%) | 482 | (58.8%) | 110 | (52.9%) | 11.9% | 102 | (57.3%) | 90 | (50.6%) | 13.6% |
| missing data | 2 | (0.2%) | 0 | (0%) | ||||||
| Bystander CPR, n (%) | 133 | (16.3%) | 25 | (12.1%) | 12.1% | 26 | (14.6%) | 18 | (10.1%) | 13.7% |
| missing data | 5 | (0.6%) | 1 | (0.5%) | ||||||
| Signs of life at scene, n (%) | 84 | (10.2%) | 8 | (3.9%) | 25.0% | 12 | (6.7%) | 6 | (3.4%) | 15.4% |
| missing data | 0 | (0%) | 1 | (0.5%) | ||||||
| Asystole at scene, n (%) | 519 | (64.4%) | 161 | (77.4%) | 28.9% | 132 | (74.2%) | 143 | (80.3%) | 14.8% |
| missing data | 16 | (1.9%) | 0 | (0%) | ||||||
| Collapsed to CA during transportation, n (%) | 97 | (12.0%) | 12 | (5.8%) | 21.8% | 15 | (8.4%) | 8 | (4.5%) | 16.1% |
| missing data | 11 | (1.3%) | 1 | (0.5%) | ||||||
| Epinephrine prior to hospital arrival, n (%) | 94 | (12.2%) | 11 | (5.5%) | 23.8% | 15 | (8.4%) | 10 | (5.6%) | 11.0% |
| missing data | 54 | (6.6%) | 9 | (4.3%) | ||||||
| ROSC prior to hospital arrival, n (%) | 23 | (2.9%) | 15 | (7.2%) | 20.0% | 7 | (3.9%) | 8 | (4.5%) | 2.8% |
| missing data | 19 | (2.3%) | 0 | (0%) | ||||||
| Signs of life on hospital arrival, n (%) | 25 | (3.1%) | 21 | (10.1%) | 28.5% | 12 | (6.7%) | 13 | (7.3%) | 2.2% |
| missing data | 21 | (2.6%) | 1 | (0.5%) | ||||||
| Asystole on hospital arrival, n (%) | 666 | (81.8%) | 181 | (87.4%) | 15.6% | 157 | (88.2%) | 160 | (89.9%) | 5.4% |
| missing data | 8 | (1.0%) | 1 | (0.5%) | ||||||
| Mechanism of Injury, penetrate, n (%) | 50 | (8.4%) | 9 | (7.8%) | 2.0% | 9 | (5.1%) | 9 | (5.1%) | 0.0% |
| missing data | 225 | (27.4%) | 93 | (44.7%) | ||||||
| Emergency call to ambulance arrival, mins, median (IQR) | 7 | (4) | 7 | (4) | 0.8% | 7 | (5) | 7 | (4) | 5.7% |
| missing data | 59 | (7.2%) | 18 | (8.7%) | ||||||
| CPR duration before hospital arrival, mins, median (IQR) | 21 | (11) | 22 | (10) | 20.7% | 21 | (11) | 22 | (10) | 13.9% |
| missing data | 59 | (7.2%) | 18 | (8.7%) | ||||||
OHCA Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest, CPR Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, CA Cardiac Arrest, ROSC Return of Spontaneous Circulation
Impact of in-hospital epinephrine on 7-day survival and secondary outcomes
| Epinephrine | no-Epinephrine | OR | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unadjusted analyses | |||||
| Survival at 7 days, | 9 (1.1%; 0.4–1.8%) | 11 (5.3%; 2.2–8.3%) | < 0.01 | 0.20 | 0.08–0.48 |
| ROSC, | 144 (17.5%; 14.9–20.1%) | 24 (11.6%; 7.2–15.9%) | 0.04 | 1.62 | 1.02–2.57 |
| Propensity score matching | |||||
| Survival at 7 days, | 1 (0.6%; 0.0–1.7%) | 9 (5.1%; 1.8–8.3%) | 0.02 | 0.11 | 0.01–0.85 |
| ROSC, | 32 (18.0%; 12.3–23.6%) | 16 (9.0%; 4.8–13.2%) | 0.01 | 2.21 | 1.16–4.19 |
ROSC Return of Spontaneous Circulation
Fig. 2Effects of in-hospital epinephrine on 7-day survival. In-hospital epinephrine use was independently associated with lower 7-day survival (odds ratio = 0.11; 95% CI = 0.01–0.85; p = 0.02) in the propensity score-matched analysis, which was conducted as a primary analysis. To confirm that the results were not dependent on the matching method, inverse probability weighting and logistic regression analyses were performed (using the propensity score as the covariate in the logistic regression analysis). * Indicates primary analysis. ** Indicates multivariate logistic regression conducted before performing the propensity score matching. Abbreviations: CI = Confidence interval
In-hospital epinephrine in Subgroup Analyses
| Epinephrine | no-Epinephrine | OR | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No signs of life upon arrival | 166 | 165 | |||
| Survival at 7 days, | 0 (0.0%; 0.0–0.0%) | 2 (1.2%; 0.0–2.9%) | 0.25 | N/A | N/A |
| ROSC, | 26 (15.7%; 10.1–21.2%) | 5 (3.0%; 0.4–5.6%) | < 0.01 | 5.91 | 2.21–15.79 |
| No epinephrine prior to arrival | 163 | 168 | |||
| Survival at 7 days, | 1 (0.6%; 0.0–1.8%) | 6 (3.6%; 0.8–6.4%) | 0.12 | 0.17 | 0.02–1.40 |
| ROSC, | 27 (16.6%; 10.9–22.3%) | 9 (5.4%; 2.0–8.8%) | < 0.01 | 3.49 | 1.58–7.67 |
ROSC Return of Spontaneous Circulation