| Literature DB >> 35845142 |
Travis W Murphy1,2,3, Scott A Cohen3, Charles W Hwang3, K Leslie Avery4, Meenakshi P Balakrishnan3, Ramani Balu5, Muhammad Abdul Baker Chowdhury3, David B Crabb3, Yasmeen Elmelige3, Carolina B Maciel5,6,7, Sarah S Gul8, Francis Han3,9, Torben K Becker1,3.
Abstract
Objectives: The Interdisciplinary Cardiac Arrest Research Review (ICARE) group was formed in 2018 to conduct an annual search of peer-reviewed literature relevant to cardiac arrest. Now in its third year, the goals of the review are to highlight annual updates in the interdisciplinary world of clinical cardiac arrest research with a focus on clinically relevant and impactful clinical and population-level studies from 2020.Entities:
Keywords: cardiopulmonary resuscitation; emergency medical services; epidemiology; heart arrest; out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest; sudden cardiac death
Year: 2022 PMID: 35845142 PMCID: PMC9282171 DOI: 10.1002/emp2.12773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open ISSN: 2688-1152
Scoring of original research articles
| Quality measure | Question | Points | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Design A | Select one | Descriptive studies (including case studies and case series, natural observation studies and descriptive surveys) | 1 ‐or‐ |
| Correlation studies (case control studies, prospective observational studies, retrospective studies) | 2 ‐or‐ | ||
| Non‐randomized or non‐blinded experimental studies | 3 ‐or‐ | ||
| Randomized, blinded experimental studies | 4 | ||
| Design B | Study design is appropriate to answer the authors’ hypothesis | 1 | |
| Design C | Correct statistical tests are used to analyze the data | 1 | |
| Design D | Results are presented accurately and without bias | 1 | |
| Design E | Limitations are clearly described, and the conclusions are supported by data | 1 | |
| Design total | 8/out of max score 8 | ||
| Ethics A | The study was approved by an institutional review board (IRB)/institutional animal use and care committee, ethics committee, community group, as required by local laws | 1 | |
| Ethics B | Informed consent was obtained or consent was waived by the IRB (give point if not applicable, e.g., animal study) | 1 | |
| Ethics C | The authors declare their conflicts of interest or declare that none exist | 2 | |
| Ethics total | 4/out of a max of 4 | ||
| Importance A | The study results are not specific to one certain patient population but are broadly generalizable to a variety of settings | 2 | |
| Importance B | The topic being studied is an important one, in that it advances the field of cardiac arrest research or care | 2 | |
| Importance C | The study is clearly relevant to the realm of cardiac arrest research or care | 1 | |
| Importance total | 5/out of a max of 5 | ||
| Impact | The findings or recommendations of this study may be feasibly implemented by practitioners | ||
| Impact A | Practitioners | 2 | |
| Impact B | The authors of this study raise interesting questions that may stimulate further research | 2 | |
| Impact C | The findings or recommendations of this study may be feasibly implemented by practitionersa of cardiac arrest care | 1 | |
| Impact total | 5/out of a max of 5 | ||
aPractitioner: reader practicing in the category of the article (physician, epidemiologist, pharmacist etc).
Scoring of review articles
| Quality measure | Question | Points |
|---|---|---|
| Clarity A | The review has a clearly stated hypothesis or purpose | 2 |
| Clarity B | The authors provide sufficient background to put the results of the review into context | 1 |
| Clarity C | The review can be understood by someone with general medical or public health training | 1 |
| Clarity D | The authors use clear language and appropriate graphs, tables, and figures throughout the article | 1 |
| Clarity total | 5/out of max score 5 | |
| Design A | This is a formal meta‐analysis or a systematic review that only includes studies with a control group | 3 |
| Design B | There is a clear, reproducible method for the selection of studies included in this review | 2 |
| Design C | Articles for this review were selected by at least 2 authors blinded to each other's selection | 1 |
| Design D | The data was aggregated and/or analyzed appropriately | 1 |
| Design total | 7/out of max score 7 | |
| Importance A | The review is not specific to one certain patient population but is broadly generalizable to a variety of settings | 2 |
| Importance B | The topic being reviewed is an important one, in that it advances the field of cardiac arrest research or care | 2 |
| Importance C | This is clearly relevant to the realm of cardiac arrest research or care | 1 |
| Importance total | 5/out of max score 5 | |
| Impact A | The findings or recommendations of this review appear to have applicability toward improving cardiac arrest research or care | 2 |
| Impact B | Practitioners | 2 |
| Impact C | The authors of this review raise interesting questions that may stimulate further research | 1 |
| Impact total | 5/out of max score 5 |
aPractitioner: reader practicing in the category of the article (physician, epidemiologist, pharmacist etc).
FIGURE 1Flowchart of screening and scoring process
2020 summary statistics of reviewer scoring by category and article type
| Article category | Original research | Review | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count (%) | Median (IQR) | Count (%) | Median (IQR) | |
| Epidemiology and Public Health | 171 (17.8) | 15 (13–17) | 21 (10.6) | 12 (9–16) |
| Prehospital Resuscitation, Technology, and Care Processes | 177 (18.4) | 16 (15–18) | 25 (12.6) | 16 (14–19) |
| In‐Hospital Resuscitation and Post‐Arrest Care Processes | 186 (19.3) | 16 (15–18) | 45 (22.7) | 16 (13–19) |
| Prognostication and Outcomes | 205 (21.3) | 16 (14–18) | 18 (9.1) | 17 (16–19) |
| Pediatrics | 77 (8.0) | 16 (15–17) | 14 (7.1) | 16 (13–21) |
| Coronavirus Disease 2019 | 29 (3.0) | 16 (14–16) | 10 (5.1) | 15.5 (14–16) |
| Interdisciplinary Guidelines and Reviews | — | — | 48 (24.2) | 14 (13–18) |
| Totals | 845 (100.0) | 16 (14–18) | 181 (100.0) | 16 (13–19) |
Brief summaries of articles by category
| First author, journal | Title | Type | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Bartos J, Circulation | Improved Survival with Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Despite Progressive Metabolic Derangement Associated with Prolonged Resuscitation | OR | Transport of out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest patients with shockable rhythms and ongoing CPR to a cardiac catheterization laboratory for ECPR improved neurologically favorable survival at all CPR durations <60 min |
| Chou E, Resuscitation | Association of Ultrasound‐Related Interruption during Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation with Adult Cardiac Arrest Outcomes: A Video‐Reviewed Retrospective Study | OR | This retrospective cohort study finds that brief echocardiography (ECHO)‐related interruption, ≤2 ECHO‐related interruptions, and ECHO‐related no‐flow time between 77–122 s during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) are associated with improved outcomes in cardiac arrest |
| Cournoyer A, Resuscitation | Can a Shockable Initial Rhythm Identify Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest Patients with a Short No‐flow Time? | OR | Presence of an initial shockable rhythm in out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest does not correlate with a short no‐flow time |
| Coute R, Am J Emerg Med | The Association Between Scene Time Interval and Neurologic Outcome Following Adult Bystander Witnessed Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest | OR | Longer scene time intervals by Emergency Medical Services is positively correlated with poorer neurological outcomes in bystander‐witnessed out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest patients |
| Felder S, Can J Emerg Med | Decreasing Time to First Shock: Routine Application of Defibrillation Pads in Prehospital STEMI | OR | This retrospective study finds that routine application of defibrillation pads to patients with prehospital ST‐elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) reduces time to initial defibrillation in out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) |
| Grunau B, JAMA | Association of Intra‐arrest Transport vs Continued On‐Scene Resuscitation with Survival to Hospital Discharge Among Patients with Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest | OR | Continued on‐scene resuscitation was associated with higher probability of survival to hospital discharge and more favorable neurologic outcomes than patients transported intra‐arrest |
| Kedan I, Cardiovasc Ultrasound | Prognostic value of point‐of‐care ultrasound during cardiac arrest: a systematic review | RE | Cardiac motion detected by ultrasound during cardiac arrest resuscitation is correlated with return of spontaneous circulation |
| Lee SGW, Am J Emerg Med | Time to First Defibrillation and Survival Outcomes of Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest with Refractory Ventricular Fibrillation | OR | Shorter times to first defibrillation attempt led to significantly improved neurological outcomes in OHCA patients with refractory ventricular fibrillation |
| Sarkisian L, Resuscitation | Global Positioning System Alerted Volunteer First Responders Arrive Before Emergency Medical Services in More Than Four Out of Five Emergency Calls | OR | Use of a GPS smartphone application to reach out to volunteer first responders during out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest could have benefit on time of arrival of a first responder with an automated external defibrillator |
| Sinden S, Resuscitation | The Association of Scene‐Access Delay and Survival with Favourable Neurological Status in Patients with Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest | OR | The curb‐to‐care time—time from EMS arrival to patient attendance—showed improved OHCA outcomes when reduced, suggesting there should be further effort to improve quick EMS access to OHCA patients on‐scene |
| Stangenes R, Resuscitation | Delays in Recognition of the Need for Telephone‐Assisted CPR Due to Caller Descriptions of Chief Complaint | OR | Caller description of chief complaints affects the time taken to recognize the need for telephone‐assisted CPR |
| Szarpak L, Am J Emerg Med | Survival, Neurological and Safety Outcomes after Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrests Treated by Using Prehospital Therapeutic Hypothermia: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis | RE | Prehospital therapeutic hypothermia did not demonstrate any improvement in survival or neurologic outcome |
| Tan BKK, Resuscitation | Clinical Evaluation of Intravenous Alone Versus Intravenous or Intraosseous Access for Treatment of Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest | OR | Attempting intraosseous access after intravenous access failure led to an improved rate of vascular success and earlier epinephrine administration, but was not associated with improved survival outcomes in EMS‐treated OHCA patients |
| Wagner P, BMJ Open | In Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest, Is the Positioning of Victims by Bystanders Adequate for CPR? A Cohort Study | OR | Approximately one‐third of bystanders position victims of cardiac arrest in a suitable position for CPR; victims placed in the “supine position” with effective chest compressions were found to have better neurologic outcomes |
| Wang CH, Ann Emerg Med | Comparing Effectiveness of Initial Airway Interventions for Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Systematic Review and Network Meta‐analysis of Clinical Controlled Trials | RE | Supraglottic airway devices proved to be the most effective at attaining ROSC; supraglottic airway devices, intubation, and bag‐valve masks were equally effective with survival to hospital discharge and neurologic outcome at discharge |
| Zalewski R, J Thoracic Dis | The Use of Prefilled Adrenaline Syringes Improves Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Quality—High‐Fidelity Simulator‐Based Study | OR | Simplification of cardiopulmonary resuscitation by prefilling syringes with medications instead of using glass ampoules may significantly improve the quality of CPR by a 2‐person team |
| Zhang Y, Resuscitation | Intravenous Versus Intraosseous Adrenaline Administration in Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Retrospective Cohort Study | OR | With regard to ROSC, survival and favorable neurologic outcome, IV administration of epinephrine appears to be superior to IO administration during OHCA resuscitations |
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| Ameloot K, J Am Coll Cardiol | Optimum Blood Pressure in Patients with Shock after Acute Myocardial Infarction and Cardiac Arrest | OR | In patients experiencing acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and cardiac arrest with shock, targeting a mean arterial pressure (MAP) goal between 80/85 and 100 mm Hg with vasopressors and inotropes during the initial 36 h in the ICU resulted in lower hs‐cTnT values, indicating smaller myocardial injury |
| Liao X, Critical Care |
Effects of Endovascular and Surface Cooling on Resuscitation in Patients with Cardiac Arrest and a Comparison of Effectiveness, Stability, and Safety: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis. | RE |
This meta‐analysis compared endovascular cooling with surface cooling for the induction of therapeutic hypothermia in adult patients with cardiac arrest |
| Liu B, J Int Med Res | Steroid Use after Cardiac Arrest Is Associated with Favourable Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis | RE | This systematic review found treatment with steroids after all causes of cardiac arrest significantly increased both rate of ROSC and survival to discharge |
| Orso D, Respir Care | Mechanical Ventilation Management During Mechanical Chest Compressions | RE | This review discusses multiple invasive ventilation strategies that have been employed in the mechanical ventilation of cardiac arrest patients |
| Verma B, JACC‐Cardiovasc Interv | Coronary Angiography in Patients with Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest without ST‐Segment Elevation: A Systematic Review And Meta‐Analysis | RE | This meta‐analysis showed that in patients who have experienced out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest without ST‐segment elevation, there is no 30‐day neurological or mortality benefit with early coronary angiography when compared to non‐early |
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| Admiraal MM, Neurology | EEG Reactivity Testing for Prediction of Good Outcome in Patients after Cardiac Arrest | OR | EEG background reactivity, when assessed twice a day using a rigorous protocol, holds additional prognostic value in distinguishing patients with higher chances of achieving independence by 6 months post‐arrest |
| Barbella G, Neurology | Prediction of Regaining Consciousness Despite an Early Epileptiform EEG after Cardiac Arrest | OR | In a retrospective cohort comprised of comatose anoxic brain injury patients with epileptiform activity on EEG, a cutoff of 2 in the NEC2RAS score—a combined 6‐point score of electroencephalographic features—was 100% sensitive in predicting consciousness recovery with an AUC of 0.96 |
| Barbella G, Resuscitation | Prognostic Role of EEG Identical Bursts in Patients after Cardiac Arrest: Multimodal Correlation | OR | Burst suppression with identical bursts on EEG remained 100% specific in predicting poor outcome in hypoxic‐ischemic brain injured patients; however, it did not add to the predictive performance when incorporated in a multimodal model |
| Beuchat I, Neurology | MRI‐EEG Correlation for Outcome Prediction in Postanoxic Myoclonus | OR | Post‐anoxic myoclonus is prevalent following cardiac arrest and is traditionally, yet not universally, associated with a poor prognosis |
| Düring J, Critical Care | Copeptin as a Marker of Outcome after Cardiac Arrest: a Sub‐Study of the TTM Trial | OR | Copeptin, a surrogate biomarker of vasoregulatory status, holds promise identifying patients with severe post‐cardiac arrest syndrome at risk for cardiovascular deterioration and early death |
| Ebner F, Resuscitation | Serum GFAP and UCH‐L1 for the Prediction of Neurological Outcome in Comatose Cardiac Arrest Patients | OR | Serial serum GFAP and UCH‐L1 combined measurements are more sensitive than neuron specific enolase in predicting poor outcome following out of hospital cardiac arrest |
| Guy A, Resuscitation | The Relationship Between No‐Flow Interval and Survival with Favourable Neurological Outcome in Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest: Implications for Outcomes and ECPR Eligibility | OR | In witnessed cardiac arrests without bystander CPR, the duration of no‐flow time carries important prognostic ability discriminating patients in whom a functional state is achievable |
| Moseby‐Knappe M, Intensive Care Med | Performance of a Guideline‐Recommended Algorithm for Prognostication of Poor Neurological Outcome after Cardiac Arrest | OR | The 2015 European Resuscitation Council and European Society of Intensive Care Medicine algorithm for post‐cardiac arrest prognostication, maintained 100% specificity for a poor outcome prediction when applied to the TTM 1 cohort, albeit with low sensitivity at 38.7% |
| Reynolds JC, Resuscitation | Prognostication with Point‐of‐Care Echocardiography During Cardiac Arrest: A Systematic Review | RE | Insufficient evidence exists supporting the use of point‐of‐care echocardiography as a prognostic tool, unveiling the need for high‐quality research with standardized timepoints and definitions for outcomes, as well as control for sources of biases on this topic |
| Sandroni C, Intensive Care Med | Prediction of Poor Neurological Outcome in Comatose Survivors of Cardiac Arrest: A Systematic Review | RE | False‐positive rates of 0% for poor outcome were retained by bilaterally absent ocular reflexes after day 4 post‐arrest, high titers of neuron specific enolase after 24 h post‐arrest, diffusion restriction on brain MRI from 2–5 days post‐arrest, diffuse cerebral edema on head CTH after 2 h post‐arrest, unequivocal seizures or bilaterally absent cortical potentials on somatosensory evoked potentials at any point post‐arrest |
| Scarpino M, Resuscitation | Does a Combination of ≥2 Abnormal Tests vs. the ERC‐ESICM Stepwise Algorithm Improve Prediction of Poor Neurological Outcome after Cardiac Arrest? A Post‐Hoc Analysis of the ProNeCA Multicentre Study | OR | A prognostication strategy combining ≥2 among bilateral absence of pupillary light reflex, cortical peaks on somatosensory evoked potentials, malignant features on EEG, diffuse cerebral edema on CT and status myoclonus |
| Wang CH, Resuscitation | Neuroprognostic Accuracy of Blood Biomarkers for Post‐Cardiac Arrest Patients: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis | RE | In this systematic review and meta‐analysis of 42 studies with a total of 4806 patients, neuron‐specific enolase (NSE) and S‐100B demonstrated comparably high specificities for predicting poor neurologic outcome after cardiac arrest |
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| Chang CY, Int J Environ Res Pu | Analysis of Chest‐Compression Depth and Full Recoil in Two Infant Chest‐Compression Techniques Performed by a Single Rescuer: Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis | RE | Results of this review and meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials demonstrate that the 2‐thumb technique surpasses the 2‐finger technique in the outcome of chest compression depth whereas the 2‐finger technique is superior to the 2‐thumb technique in achieving complete chest recoil |
| Chang C, Int J Environ Res Pu | Two‐Thumb or Two‐Finger Technique in Infant Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation by a Single Rescuer? A Meta‐Analysis with GOSH Analysis. | RE | This meta‐analysis compares the 2 techniques available for infant chest compressions: 2‐thumb vs. 2‐finger |
| Lee W, PLoS ONE | Differences in the Performance of Resuscitation According to the Resuscitation Guideline Terminology During Infant Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: “Approximately 4 cm” Versus “At Least One‐Third of the Anterior‐Posterior Diameter of the Chest” | OR | Current guidelines for infants recommend a chest compression depth (CCD) of “approximately 4 cm” or “at least one‐third the anterior‐posterior diameter of the chest” simultaneously |
| Siebert J, J Med Internet Res | The Impact of a Tablet App on Adherence to American Heart Association Guidelines During Simulated Pediatric Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: Randomized Controlled Trial | OR | In simulated cases of pediatric pulseless ventricular tachycardia, this blinded randomized controlled trial showed that using a PALS guiding application increased adherence to AHA guidelines in comparison to the traditional PALS pocket card |
| Topjian A, Circulation | Part 4: Pediatric Basic and Advanced Life Support‐2020 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care | RE | This review examines the American Heart Association's newest cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR guidelines); the guidelines expand on the Chain of Survival and the sequence of resuscitation while reaffirming evidence‐based CPR components |
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| Baldi E, Simul Healthc | A Multicenter International Randomized Controlled Manikin Study on Different Protocols of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation for Laypeople: The MANI‐CPR Trial | OR | 30c2s (30 compressions and 2s pause) and 50c5s (50 compression and 5s pause) cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) protocols utilized by laypeople in out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) events offer better quality CPR compared to continuous compressions |
| Feng D, Intern Emerg Med | Gender Differences and Survival after an Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis | RE | In a meta‐analysis, women are more likely to have significant survival benefit after cardiac arrest compared to men even though women are less likely to have shockable initial rhythm, witnessed arrest, and have CPR performed |
| Kalra R, Am J Cardiol | Cardiac Function and Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction (from the TOPCAT Trial) | OR | Left ventricular global longitudinal strain may be an independent predictor of sudden cardiac death and aborted cardiac arrest |
| Liu J, Heart Rhythm | Improvement in Sudden Cardiac Death Risk Prediction by the Enhanced American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Strategy in Chinese Patients with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy | OR | When compared to the 2011 ACC/AHA and 2014 ESC guidelines, the 2019 enhanced ACC/AHA strategy had the best predictive utility of cardiac arrest risk in a Chinese cohort |
| Scquizzato T, Resuscitation | Enhancing Citizens Response to Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Systematic Review of Mobile‐Phone Systems to Alert Citizens As First Responders | RE | This systematic review and meta‐analysis explored research that utilized mobile technology to alert citizens to act as first responders for patients experiencing out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) |
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| Olasveengen TM, Circulation | Adult Basic Life Support: 2020 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care Science with Treatment Recommendations | RE | The 2020 Basic Life Support (BLS) guidelines provide a comprehensive update to BLS treatment recommendations |
| Holmberg MJ, Resuscitation | Oxygenation and Ventilation Targets after Cardiac Arrest: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis | RE | The optimal oxygenation and ventilation targets in survivors of cardiac arrest remain unclear, though evidence continues to support targeting normoxemia and normocapnia in post‐arrest patients |
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| Gruneau B, Resuscitation Plus | Bystanders Are Less Willing to Resuscitate Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest Victims During the COVID‐19 Pandemic | OR | Members of the general public are less likely to check for pulses/breathing, and less likely to perform resuscitative measures on out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest victims during the COVID‐19 pandemic, as compared to before the pandemic onset; however, willingness to intervene increases when personal protective equipment is made available |
| Latsios G, Hellenic J Cardiol | Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in Patients with Suspected or Confirmed COVID‐19. A Consensus of the Working Group on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation of the Hellenic Society of Cardiology | RE | The COVID‐19 pandemic presented unprecedented challenges in performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) safely both in and out of clinical settings; this review incorporates the needed adjustments to basic and advanced life support to ensure provider safety and patient survivorship |
| Zheng JL, Resuscitation | Incidence and Outcome of Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrests in the COVID‐19 Era: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis | RE | Evaluation of how the COVID‐19 pandemic affected the incidence and outcomes of Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrests (OHCA); it was found that OHCA rates were increased during the COVID‐19 pandemic and this may be due to a lack of optimization in pre‐ and in‐hospital resuscitation methods |
Abbreviations: OR, Original Research; RE, Review.