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Clinical Trial Summary

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is one of the leading causes of mortality in the industrialized world. Bystander CPR before arrival of the Emergency Medical Service (EMS) is a positive predictor of survival. During the last decade, the best form of bystander CPR has been debated. Chest Compression Only CPR (CO-CPR) has been advocated as a preferable method in situations where the bystander has no previous knowledge in CPR, both because its believed to be equally efficient but also a simplified form of CPR that could lead to a higher incidence of bystander-CPR. The purpose of this study is to perform av run-in period with focus on safety and feasibility prior to the launch of a larger randomized trial which has a primary end-point of survival. This study will compare OHCA with standard CPR (S-CPR; chest compressions and rescue breaths in a 30:2 fashion) compared to CO-CPR.


Clinical Trial Description

Witnessed cases of OHCA with a non-asphyctic aetiology will be the principal study population. According to current guidelines an unresponsive patient with no or agonal breathing is treated as a suspected case of OHCA at the dispatch centre. These cases are eligible for screening for inclusion. If the case is witnessed, the bystander has previous knowledge in CPR and no exclusion criteria are present, the case can be included in the study. The intervention consists of instructions from a dispatcher at the dispatch centre to bystanders to perform either CO-CPR (intervention) or S-CPR (control). Instructions to bystanders on how to perform CO-CPR consists of continuous chest compressions without interruptions or rescue breaths. The instructions on how to perform S-CPR in the control group include information on giving chest compressions and rescue breaths in a 30:2 ratio (like current CPR recommendation state). This is a national study were all dispatch centers in Sweden participate. The overall study project is conducted in three different phases: 1. Pre study RUN-IN period, for establishing logistical and technical study procedures (completed) 2. PILOT STUDY, with focus feasibility, logistics and safety (Active, not recruting) 3. MAIN STUDY will focus on 30 days survival (primary end point) and other important clinical outcomes (secondary outcomes) Objective pre study RUN-IN period: In order to test the technical inclusion procedures, logistics, feasibility and data collection a pre-study RUN-IN period started in Stockholm during 2015. Objective PILOT study: The aim of the PILOT study is to assess safety and feasibility of the TANGO2 trial design, as well as intermediate clinical outcomes. The TANGO2 trial started recruitment of patients on January 1st 2017 and last patient was included on December 31st 2018. All patients from the PILOT study will be included in the MAIN STUDY in a seamless design. Objective MAIN study: The aim of the MAIN study is to evaluate whether survival to 30 days following instructions to perform CO-CPR is non-inferior compared to instructions to perform S-CPR bystanders in witnessed OHCA where the bystander has previous CPR training. Secondary and exploratory objectives include the evaluation of neurological favorable survival, return of spontaneous circulation, admission to hospital, long-term survival and other clinical outcome variables as well as evaluations of 30-day survival between CO-CPR and S-CPR in pre-specified subgroups. The MAIN study will include patients from the PILOT phase in a seamless design Experiences from the pre study RUN-IN period and implications for the PILOT and MAIN studies: The pre-study RUN-IN period started in Stockholm County in 2015 and analysis were performed during 2016. After continuous technological adjustments, the randomization module was integrated within the computer aided dispatch system and was found to functioned well in the end of 2016. However, during pre-study RUN-IN period, one major obstacle was identified. Due to unexpected technological matters and an unanticipated new organization of the dispatch centers in Sweden only about 15% of the cardiac arrest calls for patients suffering cardiac arrest in Stockholm were actually answered by dispatchers in Stockholm; all other calls were transferred to other dispatch centers throughout Sweden. This meant that the dispatchers had to consider the geographical site of the suspected cardiac arrest and remember if that area was part of the study area. This new organization and logistics, were the call could be made in one area and answered and handled at another site and county during the pre-study RUN-IN period, resulted in a far greatly slower inclusion rate than anticipated and made a correct follow-up of patients unmanageable and unreliable. This made it impossible to conduct a PILOT study in Stockholm only. As a consequence, a decision was made by the steering committee: A) To move the start of the PILOT study forward, until completion of the national expansion of the study and not to start inclusion of patients into the PILOT study before January 1st 2017. The new length of the PILOT study was set to two years to assure sufficient inclusion of patients to assess safety in terms of survival to hospital admission. B) That the PILOT study seamlessly will move on into the MAIN study in an inferentially seamless manner after the PILOT phase inclusion ended on Dec 31 2018. This means that patients from the PILOT study will also be included in the MAIN survival study. The outcomes for the PILOT study were changed to not interfere with the primary endpoint of the main survival study (30-day survival). Inclusion and Exclusion criteria remained unchanged throughout the TANGO2-project. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02401633
Study type Interventional
Source Karolinska Institutet
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 1, 2017
Completion date March 31, 2022

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