Abstract

Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) is a major public health problem. Owing to a lack of population-based studies in multiracial/multiethnic communities, little information is available regarding race/ethnicity-specific epidemiologic factors of SCA. To evaluate the association of race/ethnicity with burden, outcomes, and clinical profile of individuals experiencing SCA. A 5-year prospective, population-based cohort study of out-of-hospital SCA was conducted from February 1, 2015, to January 31, 2020, among residents of Ventura County, California (2018 population, 848 112: non-Hispanic White [White], 45.8%; Hispanic/Latino [Hispanic], 42.4%; Asian, 7.3%; and Black, 1.7% individuals). All individuals with out-of-hospital SCA of likely cardiac cause and resuscitation attempted by emergency medical services were included. Data on circumstances and outcomes of SCA from prehospital emergency medical services records and data on demographics and pre-SCA clinical history from detailed archived medical records, death certificates, and autopsies. Annual age-adjusted SCA incidence by race and ethnicity and SCA circumstances and outcomes by ethnicity. Clinical profile (cardiovascular risk factors, comorbidity burden, and cardiac history) by ethnicity, overall, and stratified by sex. A total of 1624 patients with SCA were identified (1059 [65.2%] men; mean [SD] age, 70.9 [16.1] years). Race/ethnicity data were available for 1542 (95.0%) individuals, of whom 1022 (66.3%) were White, 381 (24.7%) were Hispanic, 86 (5.6%) were Asian, 31 (2.0%) were Black, and 22 (1.4%) were other race/ethnicity. Annual age-adjusted SCA rates per 100 000 residents of Ventura County were similar in White (37.5; 95% CI, 35.2-39.9), Hispanic (37.6; 95% CI, 33.7-41.5; P = .97 vs White), and Black (48.0; 95% CI, 30.8-65.2; P = .18 vs White) individuals, and lower in the Asian population (25.5; 95% CI, 20.1-30.9; P = .006 vs White). Survival to hospital discharge following SCA was similar in the Asian (11.8%), Hispanic (13.9%), and non-Hispanic White (13.0%) (P = .69) populations. Compared with White individuals, Hispanic and Asian individuals were more likely to have hypertension (White, 614 [76.3%]; Hispanic, 239 [79.1%]; Asian, 57 [89.1%]), diabetes (White, 287 [35.7%]; Hispanic, 178 [58.9%]; Asian, 37 [57.8%]), and chronic kidney disease (White, 231 [29.0%]; Hispanic, 123 [40.7%]; Asian, 33 [51.6%]) before SCA. Hispanic individuals were also more likely than White individuals to have hyperlipidemia (White, 380 [47.2%]; Hispanic, 165 [54.6%]) and history of stroke (White, 107 [13.3%]; Hispanic, 55 [18.2%]), but less likely to have a history of atrial fibrillation (White, 251 [31.2%]; Hispanic, 59 [19.5%]). The results of this study suggest that the burden of SCA was similar in Hispanic and White individuals and lower in Asian individuals. The Asian and Hispanic populations had shared SCA risk factors, which were different from those of the White population. These findings underscore the need for an improved understanding of race/ethnicity-specific differences in SCA risk.

Highlights

  • Out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), a sudden loss of the pulse, affects approximately 350 000 individuals in the US annually.[1]

  • Annual age-adjusted SCA rates per 100 000 residents of Ventura County were similar in White (37.5; 95% CI, 35.2-39.9), Hispanic (37.6; 95% CI, 33.7-41.5; P = .97 vs White), and Black/African American (Black) (48.0; 95% CI, 30.8-65.2; P = .18 vs White) individuals, and lower in the Asian population (25.5; 95% CI, 20.1-30.9; P = .006 vs White)

  • The results of this study suggest that the burden of SCA was similar in Hispanic and White individuals and lower in Asian individuals

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Summary

Introduction

Out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), a sudden loss of the pulse, affects approximately 350 000 individuals in the US annually.[1]. Population-based studies of the US Black population consistently report a 2-fold higher incidence rate compared with their White counterparts,[2,3,4,5] and there is an association between low SES and increased SCA annual incidence.[6,7] The Hispanic/Latino population is the largest and most rapidly growing racial/ethnic minority group in the US, but, to our knowledge, there have been no prospective studies evaluating SCA burden for this prominent population. Studies of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in the US performed more than 2 decades ago suggested that the burden of this condition was significantly lower in Hispanic/Latino and Asian individuals compared with non-Hispanic White and Black individuals.[4,8] these retrospective studies identified SCD from death certificates, which is a relatively inaccurate method yielding a positive predictive value in the range of 19%.9. We conducted a prospective cohort study of SCA among all residents of Ventura County, California, a US community in which more than 40% of the residents are Hispanic

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