Abstract

ObjectivesA retrospective study in patients presenting out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) to assess the impact of early cardiac catheterization on survival and cerebral performance category (CPC) on discharge.BackgroundThe role of early coronary angiography in OHCA patients remains controversial. The cardiac arrest hospital prognosis (CAHP) scoring system has not been validated in the US population.MethodsInclusion criteria were OHCA patients with a sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), presumed cardiac cause of arrest, and elements to calculate CAHP score. We compared in-hospital mortality rates and final inpatient CPC in patients who underwent early cardiac catheterization to those with delayed or no cardiac catheterization. We assessed the performance of the CAHP score in the entire OHCA population using receiver-operator curve (ROC) analysis.ResultsA hundred and fifty-eight patients were included, of which 39 underwent early cardiac catheterization. The mortality rate of the early catheterization group was lower than the delayed or no catheterization group (41% vs 61.3%, p=0.02); the Early cardiac catheterization group had more favorable final hospital CPC scores overall (53.8% vs 24.3%, p<0.001). However, when risk-adjusted, there was no benefit in early catheterization for mortality or CPC level in any of the CAHP score subgroups. CAHP scores showed good discrimination with c-statistics of 0.85 for mortality and 0.90 for the CPC category.ConclusionEarly use of cardiac catheterization in OHCA patients with sustained ROSC was not associated with lower mortality rates or higher rates of favorable neurologic recovery when adjusted for baseline risk factors in each of the different CAHP score-based sub-groups. This was despite a higher proportion of patients with STEMI in the early catheterization group. We demonstrated a good fit between observed outcomes and outcomes predicted by the CAHP scoring system.

Highlights

  • Out-of-Hospital Cardiac arrest (OHCA) is a significant worldwide public health problem affecting approximately 395,000 per year and the overall survival is very low [1]

  • The mortality rate of the early catheterization group was lower than the delayed or no catheterization group (41% vs 61.3%, p=0.02); the Early cardiac catheterization group had more favorable final hospital cerebral performance category (CPC) scores overall (53.8% vs 24.3%, p

  • We demonstrated a good fit between observed outcomes and outcomes predicted by the cardiac arrest hospital prognosis (CAHP) scoring system

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Summary

Introduction

Out-of-Hospital Cardiac arrest (OHCA) is a significant worldwide public health problem affecting approximately 395,000 per year and the overall survival is very low (estimated to range from 2 to 10%) [1]. Recent literature debates the role of coronary angiography in patients, especially those with a high likelihood of death [3]. The most recent Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Intervention (SCAI) consensus statement notes that among comatose OHCA patients with ROSC and STEMI, there are no randomized controlled trials to support favorable neurological outcomes or survival benefit of immediate angiography [4]. How to cite this article Vedamurthy D, Singh S, Subedi K, et al (July 31, 2021) Outcomes With Early Cardiac Catheterization in Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest Survivors and Utility of a Prognostic Scoring System. The role of early coronary angiography in OHCA patients remains controversial. The cardiac arrest hospital prognosis (CAHP) scoring system has not been validated in the US population

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