Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trial
Official title:
Foreign Body Airway Obstruction, Incidence, Survival EMS-treatment and First Aid Treatment by Laypersons
Background:
Foreign body airway obstruction (FBAO) is often described as an uncommon cause of Out of
Hospital Cardiac Arrest (OHCA) accounting for approximately 1.4% of all OHCA. Reported
incidents rates of FBAO causing cardiac arrest are unclear, and first aid by layperson are
not well described.
The aim of the epidemiological part of the study is:
- to investigate information on actions taken by EMS-personnel and laypersons
- to investigate outcomes of hypoxic Cardiac Arrest due to foreign body airway obstruction
in Denmark
- to increase overall survival. propose new guidelines and strategies to increase survival
from OHCA caused by FBAO.
The aim of advanced text-string search algorithm part of the study is
- To investigate if an advanced text-string search algorithm can identify FBAO in medical
records with high sensitivity
Methods:
National data will be collected from the verified 2016-2019 Danish OHCA register, and cases
with FBAO prior to OHCA will selected via a direct marking by external validation and
advanced text search. Patients reported as indisputably deceased (late signs of death) was
excluded. Incidence rates per 100.000 citizens, survival rates to hospital and first aid
actions by layperson are presented.
A pilot study have been conducted in regional data from 2016-2019 and the study group have
concluded that, a national study is feasible with the current amount of data and the used
methodology.
Expected outcome:
This study will enable targeted campaigns aimed at increasing survival from OHCA caused by
FBAO. Potential campaigns might target the food items provided to potential vulnerable groups
and guide focus for first aid recommendations. Further, with a deeper understanding of which
airway management procedures most often are successful, it will be possible to improve EMS
treatments of vulnerable groups.
Finally, a novel method of extracting information from the electronic medical records will be
developed creating the foundation for future works on other prehospital conditions
Background Foreign body airway obstruction is a partial or complete blockage of airways, due
to a foreign body (for example food, toys, coins etc.) Blocked airways will untreated result
in cardiac arrest by hypoxia.
Previous research describes foreign body airway obstruction as an uncommon cause of
Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest (OHCA) accounting for approximately 1.1-1.4% of all OHCA.
Reported incident rates of foreign body airway obstruction (FBAO) causing hypoxic cardiac
arrest are unclear. It is reported to be as high as 11 per 100,000 person-years, comprising
10% of all OHCA, and neither Emergency Medical Services (EMS) treatment or first aid by
layperson are well described. When organizing prevention campaigns for serious FBAO leading
to cardiac arrest, knowledge on items with poor outcomes, vulnerable age-groups and
treatments (appropriate and non-appropriate) initiated by both laypersons and EMS-personnel
is essential. Previous studies suggest a bimodal distribution of FBAO compromised of the very
young ingesting toys or other non-food related items (coins, balloons etc.) and elderly
ingesting mainly food items . Several comorbidities are well documented to be
over-represented in fatal cases in FBAO, notably cerebral infarction; dementia;
schizophrenia; depression and Parkinson's disease .
However, FBAO leading to hypoxic cardiac arrest is a reversible cause that can easily be
treated, and therefore prevented. Hence, hypoxic cardiac arrest due to FBAO provides a great
potential for increasing overall survival from OHCA if efficient campaigns are implemented to
provide the correct diagnosis, to facilitate prompt treatment from both EMS-personnel and
laypersons. Such campaigns must be guided by evidence, realistic estimates of population and
reliable baseline measures to evaluate effect.
Although, only minor studies present data from arrival to the hospital, several studies imply
that the most common food items involved in FBAO is meat, bread, rice cakes, fruits and rice.
There is a need to include prehospital data in a national study, to include relevant
treatment administered by EMS or laypersons educated in first aid. A study by Igarashi et al.
implies that the actions of laypersons has a significant impact on survival and that they,
more often than not, use the Heimlich maneuver of abdominal thrust. However, only few
patients in this study (12%) is treated by laypersons. More knowledge on the actions of
bystanders are needed. The European Resuscitation Council currently recommend laypersons to
deliver five back blows followed by an abdominal thrust/Heimlich maneuver if a person is
suffering from severe FBAO (unable to cough). For health care personnel, including EMS, the
MaGill forceps is first-choice when removing foreign bodies, with significantly higher
survival rates reported. However, a complete report of all airway treatments and additional
factors known to impact survival have not yet been reported.
There is approximately 5.400 OHCA annually in Denmark. The most updated 30-survival (2018) is
15,7%. This is among some of the highest in the world. A multitude of efforts and campaigns
are targeting the different aspects of OHCA to improve survival. Although not yet verified,
several sources report that approximately 3-4.5% of the entire Danish population
(approximately 200.000-255.000 citizens) attend certified cardio pulmonary resuscitation
(CPR) and automatic external defibrillator (AED) courses annually. These courses supposedly
include recognition and treatment of FBOA.
Hence, with the relative few studies in the field, several knowledge gaps are persisting.
There is a need to investigate who suffers from FBAO in order to create a profile to raise
attention for health professionals responsible for treatment. Especially age and comorbidity
has proven relevant in the few and limited studies in the field.
Most of these obstacles can be overcome with a national comprehensive investigation of
prehospital data on OHCA caused by FBAO in a Danish setting.
Since the nationwide electronic medical record for the EMS providers was implemented in 2016,
all OHCA have been registered electronically using the electronic medical records and been
stored nationally. The electronic record contains a vast amount of information, including the
medical professionals notes on each patient. This enables possibilities to conduct very
direct advanced text searches for relevant trigger-words for identification of different
subgroups of OHCA. This new approach opens for possibilities in targeting very specific
subgroups, and extract information on diseases and treatment.
Aim
The aim of the epidemiological part of the study is:
- to investigate information on actions taken by EMS-personnel and laypersons
- to investigate outcomes of hypoxic Cardiac Arrest due to foreign body airway obstruction
in Denmark
- to increase overall survival.
- propose new guidelines and strategies to increase survival from OHCA caused by FBAO.
The aim of advanced text-string search algorithm part of the study is
• To investigate if an advanced text-string search algorithm can identify FBAO in medical
records with high sensitivity
Methods:
The study is a registry-based follow-up study of EMS patients in Denmark in 2016, 2017, 2018
and 2019 with cardiac arrest from foreign body airway obstruction as the presumed etiology.
OHCA data All cases of OHCA in which a resuscitative attempt is initiated is recorded in the
Danish Cardiac Arrest Registry. Most variables have been collected since 2001 on paper
sheets.
From 2016 and ongoing, the registry changed method of data-collection, moving from collecting
paper-based OHCA records to extracting information on OHCA directly from the electronic
medical records.
Because of the changeover, all records extracted from the electronic medical records was
manually processed by a verification team reading the medical record and validating the
information entered to the Danish Cardiac Arrest Registry. This ensured high-quality data
from the approximately 5,400 annually registered OHCA in Denmark, within the period of 2016
to 2018. From the direct registration and later manual verification, several additional data
sources are coupled with each registered OHCA. Notably, survival, initiation of bystander CPR
and EMS actions.
Identifying FBAO This study investigates FBAO leading to OHCA. From the Danish Cardiac Arrest
Registry all OHCA are collected and matched to the electronic prehospital medical record.
This enables the possibility for advanced text searching in the entire prehospital medical
record for cases with OHCA.
In a pilot-study performed at Copenhagen EMS in 2019, a method for identifying FBAO from
trigger-words in the electronic medical record was completed. The pilot-study was conducted
with data from the verified 2016-2018 Danish OHCA register on a population of patients
treated by Copenhagen EMS. All records on patients with OHCA for a single year was reviewed,
and OHCA from FBAO was manually identified. These records created the foundation for a list
of initially 30 trigger-words specific for FBAO, that had been collected from the medical
records in the note-fields, where ambulance physicians and paramedics could enter
observations and descriptions of the patient and treatment as free text.
These trigger-words were structured and entered into a text-search algorithm able to search
note-fields within the electronic medical records. When searching the electronic medical
records from the OHCA register, the algorithm returned 121 records, consisting of OHCA
presumably caused by FBAO. However, the initial search alone missed 17 of the manually
registered FBAO leading to OHCA and conversely, FBAO not registered were identified from the
search. After a manual review of the specified reports, new trigger-words were collected to
include reports, not identified during the initial manual registration, ultimately leading to
a revised search-string. This iterative process was performed, until no new reports appeared.
After two search-string revisions, 273 OHCA presumably caused by FBAO were identified with no
additional reports present. A total of 63 of these reports were verified manually.
From the pilot study, the investigators concluded that the method for identifying OHCA caused
by FBAO, were feasible and efficient with a high specificity. With this method, the
investigators can include national data and provide an essential base for future strategies
aimed at increasing survival. However, the obstacle of manual verification across EMS regions
persists and further data cleansing and revised search-strings are needed in order to provide
high-quality data
In this study data will be collected from the verified 2016-2019 Danish Cardiac Arrest
Registry. Cases with FBAO prior to OHCA will be identified with advanced text-searches as
described above. With the increased amount of data, the investigators will be able to refine
the algorithms, to achieve higher sensitivity and specificity. The remaining four regions not
included yet, has all pledged data permission and agreed to initiate the study when funding
have been acquired. The search-string will be modified and updated to include as many OHCA's
with FBOA as etiology as possible. This process must be conducted in all of the four
remaining regions separately.
Analysis data presentation Data will be pseudo-anonymized for analyses. The investigators
will perform analyses only on an aggregated nationwide level. Descriptive statistics,
fractions and annual incidence rates per 100.000 citizens, survival rates to hospital and
first aid actions by layperson will be presented. General trends will be presented and
Fisher's exact test together with odds ratios for survival will be calculated, stratified by
age groups, bystander and EMS-actions. The final publication will be presented based on the
STROBE statement for follow-up studies.
Data storage Data is stored on secure drive according to the regional instructions for safe
conduct of data management.
Ethical considerations The investigators will follow GDPR and register the study at the
Danish Data Protection Agency (Capital region of Denmark). As this is a Registry-based study,
no ethical approval is required. However, the regional ethical committee will be contacted
and presented with the current protocol to ensure proper ethical conduct.
Data access and analysis was approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency (reference
2007-58-0015, GEH-2014-019, I-suite 02737).
Perspectives This study will enable targeted campaigns aimed at increasing survival from OHCA
caused by FBAO. Potential campaigns might target the food items provided to potential
vulnerable groups and guide focus for first aid recommendations. Further, with a deeper
understanding of which airway management procedures most often are successful, it will be
possible to improve EMS treatments of vulnerable groups.
Finally, a novel method of extracting information from the electronic medical records will be
developed creating the foundation for future works on other prehospital conditions
List of abbreviations CPR: Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation BLS: Basic Life Support EMS:
Emergency Medical Services FBAO: Foreign Body Airway Obstruction OHCA: out-of-hospital
cardiac arrest
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
NCT05434910 -
Blood Pressure and Cerebral Blood Flow After Cardiac Arrest
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03700125 -
Pre-hospital ECMO in Advanced Resuscitation in Patients With Refractory Cardiac Arrest. ( SUB30 )
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02527694 -
CPR Quality Between Flexible Stretcher and Standard Stretcher in OHCA
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02899507 -
Prophylactic Antibiotics in Comatose Survivors of Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT02184468 -
Survival Study After Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04085692 -
Dispatcher-Assisted CPR: Low-Dose, High-Frequency Simulation-Based Training
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05029167 -
REstrictive Versus LIberal Oxygen Strategy and Its Effect on Pulmonary Hypertension After Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest (RELIEPH-study)
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04080986 -
DOuble SEquential External Defibrillation for Refractory VF
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04058925 -
Tissue Oxygenation During Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation as a Predictor of Return of Spontaneous Circulation
|
||
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT05113706 -
Does Bystanders Emotional State Influence Dispatcher-assisted Cardiopulmonary?Resuscitation
|
||
Completed |
NCT04219306 -
Machine Learning Assisted Recognition of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest During Emergency Calls.
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03881865 -
P25/30 SSEPs and Neurological Prognosis After Cardiac Arrest
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT04993716 -
Epidemiological Study on the Management of Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest Survivors in Champagne ArDEnnes
|
||
Completed |
NCT05062785 -
Dose-Finding Study of Intranasal Insulin in Healthy Participants Insulin in Healthy Participants
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT06122337 -
Systemic Evaluation of the Etiologies of Young Adults With Non-traumatic Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest
|
||
Not yet recruiting |
NCT04584463 -
Factors Associated With CPC 1-2 in 110 Patients Admitted in French ICU for a Myocardial Infarction Complicated by an OHCA.
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT03355885 -
Early-onset Pneumonia After Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05132387 -
Wroclaw Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Registry
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT02827422 -
A Prospective, Multicenter Registry With Targeted Temperature Management After Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest in Korea
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02646046 -
Combining Performance of Call EMS and Simultaneous Chest Compressions in a Lone Rescuer CPR
|
N/A |