Abstract

ObjectiveSeveral studies have examined the impact of mechanical cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) devices among multi-jurisdictional emergency medical services (EMS) systems; however, the variability across such systems can inject bias and confounding variables. We focused our investigation on the effect of introducing the Lund University Cardiac Assist System 2 (LUCAS-2) into a single basic life support (BLS) fire department first response jurisdiction served by a single private advanced life support (ALS) agency, hypothesizing that the implementation of the device would increase prehospital return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) rates as compared with manual CPR. MethodsA retrospective observational analysis of adult non-traumatic prehospital cardiac arrest ALS agency records was conducted. Descriptive statistics were computed, and logistic regression was used to assess the impact of CPR method, response time, age, gender, CPR initiator, witnessed status, automated external defibrillator (AED) initiator, and presence of an initial shockable rhythm on ROSC rates. A Chi-square analysis was used to compare ROSC rates among compression modalities both before and after the implementation of LUCAS-2 on July 1, 2011. ResultsFrom an initial dataset of 857 cardiac arrest records, only 264 (74 pre-LUCAS period, 190 LUCAS-2 period) met inclusion criteria for the primary objective. The ROSC rates were 29.7% (22/74) and 29.5% (56/190), respectively, for manual-only and LUCAS-assisted CPR (p=0.9673). Logistic regression revealed a significant association between ROSC and two of the independent variables: arrest witnessed (OR 3.104; 95% CI 1.896-5.081; p<0.0001) and initial rhythm shockable (OR 2.785; 95% CI 1.492-5.199; p<0.0013). ConclusionsAnalyses support the null hypothesis that there is no difference in prehospital ROSC rates among adult non-traumatic cardiac arrest patients when comparing mechanical-assisted and manual-only CPR. These results are consistent with other larger multi-jurisdictional mechanical CPR studies. Systems with limited personnel might consider augmenting their resuscitations with a mechanical CPR device, although cost and system design should be factored into the decision. Secondary analysis of independent variables suggests that prehospital cardiac arrest patients with a witnessed arrest or an initial rhythm that is shockable have a higher likelihood of attaining ROSC. The power of our primary objective was limited by the sample size. Additionally, we were not able to adequately assess the quality of CPR among the two comparison groups with a lack of consistent end-tidal carbon dioxide (EtCO2) data.

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