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HomeCirculationVol. 133, No. 17Letter by Chan Regarding Article, “The Utility of Therapeutic Hypothermia for Post–Cardiac Arrest Syndrome Patients With an Initial Nonshockable Rhythm” Free AccessLetterPDF/EPUBAboutView PDFView EPUBSections ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload citationsTrack citationsPermissions ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyReddit Jump toFree AccessLetterPDF/EPUBLetter by Chan Regarding Article, “The Utility of Therapeutic Hypothermia for Post–Cardiac Arrest Syndrome Patients With an Initial Nonshockable Rhythm” Paul S. Chan, MD, MSc Paul S. ChanPaul S. Chan Saint Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute and, University of Missouri, Kansas City, MO Search for more papers by this author Originally published26 Apr 2016https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.020725Circulation. 2016;133:e611To the Editor:Using data from the 6-center Penn Alliance for Therapeutic Hypothermia (PATH) registry, Perman et al1 found that patients with a nonshockable cardiac arrest treated with therapeutic hypothermia had a ≈3-fold increased odds of both survival to hospital discharge and favorable neurological survival. The authors posited that their analysis was more rigorous than previous observational studies, because they used a propensity score analysis to mimic a quasi-experimental design.Although the authors are to be lauded for addressing this important clinical question, their analyses are limited in several ways. First, a propensity score is only as useful as the measured covariates for which it accounts. The propensity score in this study adjusted for only 5 variables: age, sex, location of arrest, witnessed arrest, and duration of arrest. None of these variables reflect patients’ severity of illness, especially among those with in-hospital cardiac arrest, and the latter 3 variables pertain to only out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Given the paucity of variables in deriving the propensity score in this study, differences in unmeasured covariates between treated and untreated patients could have affected survival outcomes.Second, did the authors consider including in their propensity score 2 variables they did have at their disposal—the calendar year of the arrest and the PATH hospital site? Their Figure 1 shows that many patients from the nonhypothermia cohort were from years 2000 to 2007, whereas the hypothermia cohort did not have any cases before 2005, and the patients in that cohort were enrolled mostly after 2007. Because out-of-hospital and in-hospital cardiac arrest survival have both improved during this time period,2,3 nonadjustment of the year of cardiac arrest may have biased their results. Moreover, given that significant variation in cardiac arrest survival has been documented among hospitals,4 it would only strengthen their results if they had included the PATH hospital site (and the year of the arrest, as well) in their propensity score model.Results of previous studies of hypothermia treatment for nonshockable cardiac arrest rhythms have varied widely.5 Given the small sample size and the limited number of variables for propensity score adjustment in this study, the verdict remains inconclusive as to whether patients with cardiac arrests attributable to asystole or pulseless electric activity benefit from hypothermia treatment. Short of a large clinical trial, a much larger cohort study that uses a robust propensity score that can adequately adjust for patient severity of illness remains a high priority to demonstrate the effectiveness of hypothermia treatment for patients with nonshockable cardiac arrest rhythms.Paul S. Chan, MD, MScSaint Luke’s Mid America Heart Institute andUniversity of MissouriKansas City, MOSources of FundingDr Chan is supported by a research grant on cardiac arrest by the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (1R01HL123980). Dr Chan is also Chair of Science for the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation registry for in-hospital cardiac arrest.DisclosuresNone.

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