Abstract
Advanced airway management (AAM) is part of the standard treatment during advanced cardiac life support (ACLS). Current studies underline the importance of afirst-pass intubation success (FPS) during in-hospital ACLS. It was shown that afailed initial intubation attempt in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients in the emergency department is an independent risk factor for the decreased effectiveness of ACLS measured by the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). This study first examines the association between prehospital FPS and ROSC in adults with OHCA and second identifies factors associated with FPS and ROSC. The initial hypothesis was that FPS would increase the probability of ROSC as well as decrease the time to ROSC. Aretrospective multicenter analysis of 180 adult non-traumatic OHCA patients on whom advanced airway management (AAM) was performed between July 2017 and December 2018 in five different German physician-staffed ambulance stations. For information on FPS the Intubation Registry, and for information on ROSC the German Resuscitation Registry were used. In addition to yes/no questions, multiple answers and free text answers are possible in those questionnaires. The main outcome variables were 'FPS', 'ROSC' and 'time to ROSC'. Mann-Whitney tests, χ2-tests, Fisher's exact tests and multivariate binary logistic regressions were used for the statistical evaluation. Demographic factors, characteristics of the performer, selected equipment, laryngoscopy type, intubation method, medications, verification of tube position, respiratory evaluation, complications and time to ROSC were examined with respect to the influence on FPS. Concerning ROSC, the following factors were examined: demographic factors, initial heart rhythm, initial breathing, medications, defibrillation and AAM. An FPS was recorded in 150patients (83.3%), and ROSC was achieved in 82patients (45.5%) after an average time of 22.16 min. There was apositive association between FPS and ROSC (p = 0.027). In patients with FPS, atrend for shorter time to ROSC was observed (p = 0.059; FPS 18 min; no FPS 28 min). The use of capnography (odds ratio, OR = 7.384, 95% confidence interval, CI 1.886-28.917) and complications during AAM (OR = 0.033, 95% CI: 0.007-0.153) were independently associated with FPS. The independent factor associated with ROSC was FPS (OR = 5.281, 95% CI: 1.800-15.494). In prehospitally resuscitated adult OHCA patients with AAM, FPS is associated with ahigher chance of ROSC.
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