Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trial
Official title:
Basic Life Support Termination of Resuscitation in the Prehospital Environment for Primary Care Paramedics - A Prospective Observational Study of the Implementation of a Clinical Prediction Rule
In Ontario, most people who experience a cardiac arrest at home (when their heart stops
beating) only receive basic life support from Primary Care Paramedics (PCPs) and all are
transported to the hospital. Most are pronounced dead by the emergency physician as the mean
survival rate for these patients is 5%. Allowing Primary Care Paramedics to use a
termination of resuscitation guideline would identify futile cases for which further
resuscitation is unwarranted and decrease the number of patients being transported to the
emergency department (ED) for pronouncement.
There are numerous advantages to this strategy; first, it may improve the efficiency of the
ED because cardiac arrest patients require immediate attention that is diverted from
patients who have a better chance at survival. Second, the risk of injury and the monetary
costs for the paramedic and the public would be minimized with fewer "light and sirens"
transports which are known to be hazardous to motorists, pedestrians, and Emergency Medical
Services (EMS) personnel.
For each cardiac arrest, PCPs will respond to the call as usual and implement standard basic
life support cardiac arrest protocols. Patients are then categorized according to the
termination of resuscitation recommendations:
1. no return of spontaneous circulation is achieved (no heartbeat);
2. no shock was given prior to transport; and
3. the arrest (when the heart stops beating) was not witnessed by EMS personnel.
If all of these criteria are true, the PCP will contact the hospital and the decision by the
emergency physician will then be made to stop life saving measures (terminate resuscitation)
in the home or continue with life support and transport the patient to the local emergency
department.
This study aims to document the usefulness of the termination of the resuscitation guideline
in decreasing the rate of transport of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients to the ED.
Secondary aims of this implementation study will be to describe the rates of erroneous
application of the guideline. The comfort of use of the rule among paramedics and base
hospital emergency physicians will be described.
In Ontario, most victims of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) do not receive Advanced
Cardiac Life Support (ACLS); rather, they receive only Basic Life Support (BLS) from Primary
Care Paramedics (PCPs), where the survival rate is approximately 5%. Every one of these
patients is transported to the Emergency Department (ED), where the vast majority are
pronounced dead. Conversely, patients who do not respond to ACLS by Advanced Care Paramedics
(ACPs) are pronounced dead in the field via patching to the Base Hospital Physician (BHP).
Implementation of a termination of resuscitation (TOR) guideline for the PCP's use would
decrease the number of non-viable patients transported to the ED.
A reduction of unsuccessfully resuscitated cardiac arrest patients transported to the ED
would have numerous advantages. First, it may improve the efficiency of the ED health care
system because cardiac arrest patients in the ED require immediate attention that is
diverted from potentially more salvageable patients. Second, the risk of injury and the
monetary costs for the paramedic and the public would be minimized with fewer "light and
sirens" transports which are known to be hazardous to motorists, pedestrians, and EMS
personnel. Additionally, it is less expensive to pronounce non-viable patients in the field.
And, finally termination of resuscitative efforts in the field permits the paramedic to turn
his attention and skill set to supporting the family through the initial stages of grief.
The most recent American Heart Association (AHA) emergency cardiac care guidelines suggest
that there is a need to develop TOR protocols for PCPs in situations where ACLS care is not
rapidly available, and call for more scientific evidence to support the implementation of
such guidelines.
We derived and prospectively validated a clinical prediction rule to guide PCP termination
of resuscitation in out of hospital cardiac arrest.
The TOR implementation study aims to document the usefulness of the TOR guideline, as
specified by a newly developed medical directive, in decreasing the rate of transport of
OHCA patients to the ED. Secondary aims of this implementation study will be to describe the
rates of erroneous application of the guideline. The comfort of use of the rule among
paramedics and base hospital emergency physicians will be described.
This will be a multi-centre prospective implementation study involving a combination of
urban and rural regional EMS systems across Ontario. Included will be consecutive patients
who suffer from non-traumatic cardiac arrest (i.e. of presumed cardiac etiology). Identical
to the derivation and validation phase, patients will be excluded from the study if: their
arrest is due to trauma, drowning or drug overdose; they receive any prehospital ACLS care;
they possess a documented "Do Not Resuscitate" directive; or they are less than 18 years of
age.
Cases that meet inclusion criteria will be enrolled consecutively. For each cardiac arrest,
paramedics will respond to the call as usual and initiate resuscitation attempts. Patients
suffering from cardiac arrest that (1) was not witnessed by EMS personnel; (2) had no shocks
delivered by anyone; and (3) have had no return of spontaneous carotid or femoral pulse meet
the criteria for TOR. In these circumstances PCPs will patch to the local BHP using the
standard patching process. The BHP will then direct the paramedic to either continue
resuscitation and transport, or terminate resuscitation in the field based on the TOR
guideline and their clinical judgment of each individual call. In the case of failure of the
paramedic to reach the BHP, the paramedic is directed to continue resuscitation and
transport as per normal procedures, regardless of what the TOR guideline recommends. Data
for each case will be requested from both the paramedic and the emergency physician using a
uniform data collection sheet and the standardized Ontario Ambulance Call Report (ACR).
The rate of patient transport to the ED will be calculated. The obtained rate of transport
will be compared to the theoretical rate obtained in the validation study, 37.4% using a one
sample test, two sided, test of proportions, in order to evaluate the utility of the rule to
decrease transport rates. Rates of erroneous application of the rule by both paramedics and
emergency physicians will be calculated by identifying and tabulating the various reason for
non-compliance. Occurrence of adverse patient outcomes, such as ROSC after TOR will be
closely monitored.
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