| Literature DB >> 33842515 |
Yutaka Kondo1, Tatsuma Fukuda2, Ryo Uchimido3, Masahiro Kashiura4, Soichiro Kato5, Hiroshi Sekiguchi2, Yoshito Zamami6, Toru Hifumi7, Kei Hayashida8.
Abstract
Background: Advanced Life Support (ALS) is regarded to be associated with improved survival in pre-hospital trauma care when compared to Basic Life Support (BLS) irrespective of lack of evidence. The aim of this study is to ascertain ALS improves survival for trauma in prehospital settings when compared to BLS.Entities:
Keywords: emergency medical services; first aid; injury; mortality; resuscitation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33842515 PMCID: PMC8032986 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2021.660367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Flow chart of the study selection process From Moher et al. (13).
Baseline characteristics of eligible studies.
| 1 | Potter et al. ( | Australia | Controlled Trial | 1,061 | Blunt and Penetrating | Head, Torso and Extremity | 37 | Physician and Paramedics | Physician and Paramedics | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
| 2 | Murphy et al. ( | US | Retrospective Cohort | 2,394 | Blunt and Penetrating | Head, Torso and Extremity with multiple injuries | 17 | Not described | Not described | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
| 3 | Liberman et al. ( | Canada | Prospective Cohort | 9405 | Blunt and Penetrating | Head, Torso and Extremity | 26 | Paramedics | Physician and Paramedics | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
| 4 | Osterwalder ( | Switzerland | Prospective Cohort | 196 | Blunt | Head, Torso and Extremity | 24 | Physician and Paramedics | Physician and Paramedics | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
| 5 | Steil ( | Canada | Before-after controlled trial | 2,867 | Blunt, Penetrating and Burn | Head, Torso and Extremity | 24 for BLS, 22 for ALS | Paramedics | Paramedics | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
| 6 | Seamon et al. ( | US | Prospective Cohort | 236 | Penetrating | Head, Torso and Extremity | 20.8 | Paramedics | Paramedics | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
| 7 | Meizono ( | US | Retrospective Cohort | 3,733 (122, after adjustment) | Blunt, Penetrating and Burn | Not described | 5 | Not described | Not described | No Procedures of ALS group | |
| 8 | Sanghavi et al. ( | US | Retrospective Cohort | 79,687 | Not described | Not described | New ISS was used. | Not described | Not described | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
| 9 | Rappold et al. ( | US | Retrospective Cohort | 1,490 | Penetrating | Not described | 13 for ALS, 10 for BLS | Paramedics | Paramedics | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
| 10 | Fukuda et al. ( | Japan | Retrospective Cohort | 4,382 | Blunt and Penetrating | Head, Torso and Extremity | Unknown | Physician and Paramedics | Physician and Paramedics | All BLS procedures | All ALS procedures |
ISS, injury severity score; BLS, basic life support; ALS, advanced life support; US, United States.
Needle decompression, tourniquet use, cricothyroidotomy, or ACLS procedures other than intravenous fluid.
Figure 2Risk of bias summary in included studies: (A) based on the criteria recommended by the Cochrane Collaboration for RCTs, and (B) based on the Risk of Bias Assessment Tool for Nonrandomized Studies for observational studies.
Figure 3Forest plot of the comparison: ALS vs. BLS for in-hospital mortality (A) Controlled trials; (B) Observational studies. ALS, advanced life support, BLS, basic life support, IV, inverse variance weighted method, CI, confidence interval.
Figure 4Forest plot of the comparison: ALS vs. BLS for neurological outcomes. ALS, advanced life support; BLS, basic life support; IV, inverse variance weighted method; CI, confidence interval.
Figure 5Forest plot of the comparison: ALS vs. BLS for on-scene spending time (A) controlled trials; (B) observational studies. The unit of number in mean is minutes. ALS, advanced life support; BLS, basic life support, IV, Inverse variance weighted method; CI, confidence interval.
Summary of finding table.
| Mortality (CTs) | 139 per 1,000 | 156 per 1,000 (133 to 180) | OR 1.14 (0.95 to 1.36) | 3,928 (2 studies) | ⊕ ⊕ ⊕ ○ Moderate |
| Mortality (OS) | 161 per 1,000 | 231 per 1,000 (201 to 263) | OR 1.56 (1.31 to 1.86) | 97,062 (8 studies) | ⊕ ○○ ○ Very low |
| Disability of CNS (CTs) | 273 per 1,000 | 296 per 1,000 (248 to 348) | OR 1.12 (0.88 to 1.42) | 1,394 (2 studies) | ⊕ ⊕ ○ ○ LOW |
| On-scene time (CTs) | The mean total time on scene was 0 | MD 0.96 lower (6.64 lower to 4.72 higher) | - | 3,034 (2 studies) | ⊕ ⊕ ⊕ ○ Moderate |
| On-scene time (OS) | The mean on-scene time was 0 | MD 1.26 higher (0.07 higher to 2.45 higher) | - | 1,258 (3 studies) | ⊕ ⊕ ○ ○ LOW |
The risk in the ALS group (and its 95% confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the BLS group and the relative effect of the ALS (and its 95% CI).
CI, confidence interval; BLS, basic life support; ALS, advanced life support; GRADE, The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation, RCT, randomized control trial; OS, observational study; OR, odds ratio; CNS, central nerve system; MD, mean difference.