Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trial
Official title:
ResQ Trial: Comparison of Standard CPR Alone Versus Active Compression Decompression CPR Plus an ITD on Survival From Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest
The purpose of this study is to determine whether performing active compression decompression cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ACD-CPR) with an impedance threshold device (ITD) compared to conventional standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation (S-CPR) will impact the neurologic recovery and survival to hospital discharge following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
Despite receiving conventional, standard CPR (S-CPR), most patients who experience
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest die prior to arriving at a hospital. At the present time, the
hospital discharge rate following out-of-hospital, nontraumatic cardiac arrest in adults in
the United States is estimated to be less than 5%. Many factors contribute to the current
poor survival statistics, including the inefficiency of the technique itself. CPR provides
only 10% to 20% of normal myocardial perfusion, and only 20% to 30% of physiologically normal
cerebral perfusion.
A new method of CPR that combines ACD and an ITD (ACD-CPR+ITD) has been shown in animal
models and in clinical trials conducted in Europe to provide significantly more blood flow to
the vital organs and to improve survival rates when compared to S-CPR or ACD-CPR alone.
ACD-CPR+ITD works by decreasing intrathoracic pressure during the chest wall recoil (or
decompression) phase of CPR, creating a vacuum within the thorax relative to the rest of the
body. When compared with controls, use of ACD-CPR+ITD (a) enhances blood return to the thorax
during the chest wall recoil phase, (b) enhances blood flow to the heart and brain, (c)
provides real-time feedback to rescuers to maintain high-quality CPR, (d) improves overall
CPR efficiency and, as a result of the forgoing, (e) improves short-term survival rates.
The sponsor and others recently evaluated the effectiveness of the combination of
conventional, manual standard CPR±ITD in animals and humans. The ITD increased short-term
survival rates in these studies as well. Two clinical trials were performed in Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, under IDE (#G980125). Both compared S-CPR with either a sham (nonfunctional or
placebo) or active (functional) ITD. The results from the hemodynamic study demonstrated that
systolic blood pressure, the primary end point, increased from approximately 45 mmHg with the
sham ITD to approximately 85 mmHg with the active ITD (P less than 0.05). Intensive care unit
admission rate was the primary end point of the clinical outcome study.
Comparisons: The objective of this two-arm, multisite, randomized, pivotal IDE clinical trial
is to compare survival to hospital discharge with neurologic recovery rates in subjects
receiving S-CPR compared to ACD-CPR+ITD following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in
well-established American emergency medical services systems.
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