| Literature DB >> 32076566 |
Elizabeth Davida Paratz1,2,3, Luke Rowsell1, Dominica Zentner4,5, Sarah Parsons6, Natalie Morgan6, Tina Thompson5, Paul James5,7, Andreas Pflaumer8,9, Christopher Semsarian10, Karen Smith11,12, Dion Stub3,13, Andre La Gerche1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Background: Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is a major global health problem, accounting for up to 20% of deaths in Western societies. Clinical quality registries have been shown in a range of disease conditions to improve clinical management, reduce variation in care and improve outcomes. Aim: To identify existing cardiac arrest (CA) and SCD registries, characterising global coverage and methods of data capture and validation.Entities:
Keywords: emergency medicine; epidemiology; resuscitation; sudden cardiac death
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32076566 PMCID: PMC6999684 DOI: 10.1136/openhrt-2019-001195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Heart ISSN: 2053-3624
Figure 1Flow diagram of registry identification, selection and inclusion.
Existing CA, SCD and other registries identified
| Cardiac arrest registry | Other | Multisource sudden cardiac death registry | |
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| Prehospital metrics primarily collected, using standard Utstein templates. | Inclusion criteria may include any of: | Multisource data surveillance and sampling. |
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| Benchmarking of prehospital and in-hospital performance outcomes primarily using Utstein-type variables to improve system response and management of cardiac arrest with an aim to improve outcomes. | A registry not incorporating either standard prehospital metrics nor a multisource surveillance approach. May provide a snapshot of cardiac arrest care from receiving hospital or intermittent data collection or may collect higher level non-clinical data such as genetic data only. | To use multiple sources of cardiac arrest reporting to establish the most accurate community rates of SCD. |
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International Cardiac Arrest Registry. Paris-Sudden Death Expertise Centre. Registry. French National Cardiac Arrest Registry. Parisian Region OHCA Registry. Belgian Cardiac Arrest Registry. German Resuscitation Registry. Vienna Cardiac Arrest Registry. Ticino Cardiac Arrest Registry. Hungarian National Ambulance Service Registry. Silesian Registry of Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest. Amsterdam Resuscitation Studies Registry. Danish Cardiac Arrest registry. Danish In-hospital Cardiac Arrest Registry. SCDY in Denmark. Swedish Cardiac Arrest Registry. Stockholm Region Arrest Registry. Helsinki Cardiac Arrest Registry. FINNRESUSCI Study Group. Oslo and Akershus Registry. Iceland Fire and Service Rescue Registry. Norwegian Cardiac Arrest Registry. Andalusian Registry of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. Spanish OHCA Registry. Pavia Cardiac Arrest Registry. Registry for Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrests in Malta. Romanian Registry of Cardiac Arrest. Slovak Cardiac Arrest Registry. UK Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest Outcomes Registry. UK National Cardiac Arrest Audit. London Ambulance Service Registry. Scottish Ambulance Service OHCA Registry. Irish National Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest Register (OHCAR). Seattle Cardiac Arrest Surveillance System. Get with the Guidelines – Resuscitation. Save Hearts in Arizona Registry and Education. University of Ottawa Heart Institute Regional Cardiac Arrest Registry. Brazilian Registry of In-Hospital CPR (CODE Registry). Qatar OHCA Registry. Lebanese Cardiac Arrest Registry. Egyptian Cardiac Arrest Project. Japanese Association for Acute Medicine Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest Registry. Utstein Osaka Project. Taichung Sudden Unexpected Death Registry. Korean Cardiac Arrest Consortium. Queensland Ambulance Service. South Australia Ambulance Service. Victorian Ambulance Cardiac Arrest Registry. St John New Zealand OHCA Registry. St John Ambulance WA OHCA Registry. |
Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival. Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium (ROC) Cardiac Arrest Epistry. Canada Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium. Pan-Asian Resuscitation Outcomes Study. Aus-ROC Epistry. European Registry of Cardiac Arrest. Registry of Malignant Arrhythmias and Sudden Cardiac Death. European Sudden Cardiac Arrest Network. Hannover Cooling Registry. |
Unexplained Cardiac Death Project. Nantes Centre for the Prevention of SCD. Andalusian Registry of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: Clinical and Pathological Registry of Tarragona. Cardiac Risk in the Young. Pan-Africa SCD study. Douala-SCD study. Tunisian Sudden Cardiac Death Registry. Sudden Death in the Young Registry. Oregon Sudden Unexplained Death Study. Sudden Unexplained Death in North Carolina. Sudden Unexplained Death in Childhood. Canadian Sudden Cardiac Arrest Network. Cardiac Arrest Survivors with Preserved Ejection Fraction. SCD Germany (sport). FIFA-SDR Registry (football). |
CA, cardiac arrest; FIFA-SDR, federation internationale de football association - sudden death registry; OHCA, out of hospital cardiac arrest; SCD, sudden cardiac death; SCDY, sudden cardiac death in the young.
Figure2Current global distribution of cardiac arrest, sudden cardiac death and other registries.
Details of sudden cardiac death registries
| Site | Commenced | Age (years) | Case identification and data collected | Numbers enrolled | |
| Unexplained Cardiac Death Project | Australia | 2019 | 1–50 | Case reporting via ambulance services, with correlation with forensic and hospital results. | 300 |
| SCD Germany | Germany | 2012 | 10–79 | Systematic media monitoring (~70% case identification). Online reporting of cases by family members, athletes and coaches (~30% case identification). | ~200 |
| FIFA-SDR Registry in Football | Global coverage but administered by same German institute as SCD Germany | 2014 | All | Systematic media monitoring (~70% case identification). Online reporting of cases by family members, athletes and coaches (~30% case identification). | ~100 |
| Nantes Centre for the Prevention of SCD | France | 2009 | <45 | Referral from medical centres in France to coordinating registry. | 64 families |
| Andalusian Registry of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest | Catalonia, Spain | 2014 | All | Initial referral from ambulance services, linked with forensic and in-hospital results and ongoing clinical care. | 4072 as of 2016 |
| Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY) | UK | 1995 | <35 | Autopsy-based case identification: cases referred from across the UK. | 5200 |
| Pan-Africa SCD study | ’15 African countries’ | 2015 | >15 | Case identification primarily via hospitals, local newspapers and screening of death certificates. | 0 – awaiting financing still |
| Douala-SCD study | Douala, Cameroon | 2014 | >15 | Case identification via local reporting and screening of wakes, then obtaining medical reports. | 2–304 |
| Tunisian Sudden Cardiac Death Registry | Tunisia | 2012 | >20 | Prehospital and hospital data combined with autopsy results. | 542 |
| Sudden Death in the Young Registry | Georgia, Tennessee, New Jersey, Minnesota, Nevada, Delaware, New Hampshire, Virginia, Wisconsin, USA | 2014 | <20 | Primary case identification via autopsies. Population-based surveillance of all sudden deaths including SUDEP and SCD. Excluded if known terminal illness, homicide, suicide, accident or clearly drugs. | As of 2016: |
| Oregon Sudden Unexplained Death Study | Oregon, USA | 2002 | all | Multisource notification: ambulance services, emergency departments and/or coroner. Adjudication of all cases to determine if true SCD. | 353 |
| Sudden Unexplained Death in North Carolina | North Carolina, USA: Wake County Emergency Medical Services | 2013 | 18–65 | Electronic death certificate screening for OHCA in previous year in appropriate age range. | 399 as of 2015 |
| Sudden Unexplained Death in Childhood | USA, and accepts referrals from external to the USA (has received case details from 16 other countries) | 2014 | 11 months–18 years | Self-referral of patients (typically by parents) through website and social media outreach. Self-referral internationally also accepted. | ~170 families |
| Cardiac Arrest Survivors with Preserved Ejection Fraction | 14 centres across Canada | 2004 | >2 | Enrolling survivor patients and first-degree family members. Family members of deceased patients also included. | 1350 |
| Canadian Sudden Cardiac Arrest Network | Canadian national registry | 2018 | 2–85 | Case identification via ambulance services and coronial reporting linked with administrative databases. | Commencing from 2018 |
LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; SCA, sudden cardiac arrest; SCD, sudden cardiac death; VF, ventricular fibrillation; VT, ventricular tachycardia.
Figure 3Multi-source data surveillance and capture provides the optimum mechanism of case adjudication and refining case inclusion in SCD registries.
Avenues for data sourcing in sudden cardiac death registries
| Benefits | Limitations | UCDP Registry implementation | |
| Ambulance-based out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) registries | Many countries have well-established OHCA registries ( | Rates of first-responder reported OHCA have been shown to have significant mismatch when correlated with autopsy (ie, drugs may be responsible for cardiac arrest). | Ambulance data will be a key component of the UCDP Registry and a vital source of case detection. Data will be cross-referenced from other sources to enhance internal case verification and data quality. |
| In-hospital cardiac arrest registers | Most hospitals maintain a ‘Code Blue’ or cardiac arrest registry that can be accessed. | There are over 1300 public and private hospitals in Australia. | The registry will be an OHCA registry only. The impact of this is discussed further in the article. |
| Forensic institutes: autopsy data | Autopsy is the gold standard investigation in verifying that a sudden death is cardiac in aetiology. | Rates of autopsy are falling. | Will be used to verify rates of sudden cardiac death and cross-reference with ambulance data. |
| Death certificate tracking | Should represent the broadest way of capturing the denominator as the endpoint. | Reported rates of death due to ‘sudden cardiac death’, ‘cardiac arrest’ and ‘heart failure’ are notoriously high: the positive predictive value of a death certificate stating ‘sudden cardiac death’ is only 19%. | Needs to be correlated against autopsy data as part of a multiple source surveillance protocol to reduce over-reporting. |
| Genetic heart disease registries or disease-specific registries (ie, Brugada syndrome) | There will be overlap between patients with genetic heart conditions (and their families) and sudden cardiac death. | Patients already known to have genetic heart disease and enrolled with disease-specific registries will receive appropriate therapy/devices and be anticipated to have a low rate of sudden cardiac death. | Primary utility may be in data linkage or dual referral to both UCDP Registry and disease-specific registry when a death occurs and culprit is identified. |
UCDP, Unexplained Cardiac Death Project.