Abstract

Military experience has demonstrated mortality improvement when advanced resuscitative care (ARC) is provided for trauma patients with severe hemorrhage. The benefits of ARC for trauma in civilian EMS systems with short transport intervals are still unknown. We hypothesized that ARC implementation in an urban EMS system would reduce in-hospital mortality. This was a prospective analysis of ARC bundle administration between 2021 and 2023 in an urban EMS system with 70,000 annual responses. The ARC bundle consisted of calcium, tranexamic acid (TXA), and PRBCs via a rapid infuser. ARC patients were compared to trauma registry controls from 2016 to 2019. Included were patients with a penetrating injury and SBP < 90 mmHg. Excluded were isolated head trauma or prehospital cardiac arrest. In-hospital mortality was the primary outcome of interest. A total of 210 patients (ARC = 61, controls = 149) met criteria. Median age was 32 years, with no difference in demographics, initial SBP or heart rate recorded by EMS, or new injury severity score (NISS) between groups. At hospital arrival, ARC patients had lower median heart rate and shock index than controls (p < 0.03). Fewer patients in the ARC group required prehospital advanced airway placement (p < 0.001). 24-hour and total in-hospital mortality were lower in the ARC group (p < 0.04). Multivariable regression revealed an independent reduction in in-hospital mortality with ARC (OR 0.19, 95%CI 0.05-0.68, p = 0.01). Early ARC in a fast-paced urban EMS system is achievable and may improve physiologic derangements while decreasing patient mortality. ARC closer to the point of injury warrants consideration. Level IV, Prospective.

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