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Emergency Department inter-hospital transfer for post-cardiac arrest care: Initial experience with implementation of a regional cardiac resuscitation center in the United States
Authors:Brian W. Roberts  J. Hope Kilgannon  Jessica A. Mitchell  Neil Mittal  Janah Aji  Michael E. Kirchhoff  Sergio Zanotti  Joseph E. Parrillo  Michael E. Chansky  Stephen Trzeciak
Affiliation:1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, USA;2. Department of Medicine, Divisions of Cardiology, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, USA;3. Critical Care Medicine, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, USA
Abstract:

Objective

The American Heart Association recently recommended regional cardiac resuscitation centers (CRCs) for post-resuscitation care following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Our objective was to describe initial experience with CRC implementation.

Methods

Prospective observational study of consecutive post-resuscitation patients transferred from community Emergency Departments (EDs) to a CRC over 9 months. Transfer criteria were: OHCA, return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), and comatose after ROSC. Incoming patients were received and stabilized in the ED of the CRC where advanced therapeutic hypothermia (TH) modalities were applied. Standardized post-resuscitation care included: ED evaluation for cardiac catheterization, TH (33–34 °C) for 24 h, 24 h/day critical care physician support, and evidence-based neurological prognostication. Prospective data collection utilized the Utstein template. The primary outcome was survival to hospital discharge with good neurological function [Cerebral Performance Category 1 or 2].

Results

Twenty-seven patients transferred from 11 different hospitals were included. The majority (21/27 [78%]) had arrest characteristics suggesting poor prognosis for survival (i.e. asystole/pulseless electrical activity initial rhythm, absence of bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or an unwitnessed cardiac arrest). The median (IQR) time from transfer initiation to reaching TH target temperature was 7 (5–13) h. Ten (37%) patients survived to hospital discharge, and of these 9/10 (90% of survivors, 33% of all patients) had good neurological function.

Conclusions

Despite a high proportion of patients with cardiac arrest characteristics suggesting poor prognosis for survival, we found that one-third of CRC transfers survived with good neurological function. Further research to determine if regional CRCs improve outcomes after cardiac arrest is warranted.
Keywords:Cardiac arrest   Heart arrest   Cardiopulmonary resuscitation   Resuscitation   Anoxic brain injury   Therapeutic hypothermia   Cardiac arrest center
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