Abstract

IntroductionFollowing initial resuscitation from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, rearrest frequently occurs and has been associated with adverse outcomes. We aimed to identify clinical, treatment, and demographic characteristics associated with prehospital rearrest at the encounter and agency levels. MethodsAdult non-traumatic cardiac arrest patients who achieved ROSC following EMS resuscitation in the 2018–2021 ESO annual datasets were included in this study. Patients were excluded if they had a documented DNR/POLST or achieved ROSC after bystander CPR only. Rearrest was defined as post-ROSC CPR initiation, administration of ≥ 1 milligram of adrenaline, defibrillation, or a documented non-perfusing rhythm on arrival at the receiving hospital. Multivariable logistic regression modeling was used to evaluate the association between rearrest and case characteristics. Linear regression modeling was used to evaluate the association between agency-level factors (ROSC rate, scene time, and scene termination rate), and rearrest rate. ResultsAmong the 53,027 cases included, 16,116 (30.4%) experienced rearrest. Factors including longer response intervals, longer ‘low-flow’ intervals, unwitnessed OHCA, and a lack of bystander CPR were associated with rearrest. Among agencies that treated ≥ 30 patients with outcome data, the agency-level rate of rearrest was inversely associated with agency-level rate of survival to discharge to home (R2 = -0.393, p < 0.001). ConclusionsThis multiagency retrospective study found that factors associated with increased ischaemic burden following OHCA were associated with rearrest. Agency-level rearrest frequency was inversely associated with agency-level survival to home. Interventions that decrease the burden of ischemia sustained by OHCA patients may decrease the rate of rearrest and increase survival.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call