Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Geriatrics, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
BMC Geriatr. 2013 Jul 3;13:68. doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-13-68.
To enable older people to make decisions about the appropriateness of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), information is needed about the predictive value of pre-arrest factors such as comorbidity, functional and cognitive status on survival and quality of life of survivors. We systematically reviewed the literature to identify pre-arrest predictors for survival, quality of life and functional outcomes after out-of-hospital (OHC) CPR in the elderly.
We searched MEDLINE (through May 2011) and included studies that described adults aged 70 years and over needing CPR after OHC cardiac arrest. Prognostic factors associated with survival to discharge and quality of life of survivors were extracted. Two authors independently appraised the quality of each of the included studies. When possible a meta-analysis of odd's ratios was performed.
Twenty-three studies were included (n = 44,582). There was substantial clinical and statistical heterogeneity and reporting was often inadequate. The pooled survival to discharge in patients >70 years was 4.1% (95% CI 3.0-5.6%). Several studies showed that increasing age was significantly associated with worse survival, but the predictive value of comorbidity was investigated in only one study. In another study, nursing home residency was independently associated with decreased chances of survival. Only a few small studies showed that age is negatively associated with a good quality of life of survivors. We were unable to perform a meta-analysis of possible predictors due to a wide variety in reporting and statistical methods.
Although older patients have a lower chance of survival after CPR in univariate analysis (i.e. 4.1%), older age alone does not seem to be a good criterion for denying patients CPR. Evidence for the predictive value of comorbidities and for the predictive value of age on quality of life of survivors is scarce. Future studies should use uniform methods for reporting data and pre-arrest factors to increase the available evidence about pre arrest factors on the chance of survival. Furthermore, patient-specific outcomes such as quality of life and post-arrest cognitive function should be investigated too.
为了使老年人能够对心肺复苏术(CPR)的适宜性做出决策,需要了解诸如合并症、功能和认知状态等预先存在的因素对院外(OHC)CPR 后幸存者的生存和生活质量的预测价值。我们系统地回顾了文献,以确定老年人 OHC 心脏骤停后 CPR 生存、生活质量和功能结局的预先存在的预测因素。
我们检索了 MEDLINE(截至 2011 年 5 月),并纳入了描述需要 OHC 心脏骤停后进行 CPR 的年龄在 70 岁及以上的成年人的研究。提取与生存至出院和幸存者生活质量相关的预后因素。两位作者独立评估了每个纳入研究的质量。在可能的情况下,对优势比进行了荟萃分析。
共纳入 23 项研究(n=44582)。存在较大的临床和统计学异质性,且报告通常不充分。>70 岁患者的出院生存率为 4.1%(95%CI 3.0-5.6%)。多项研究表明,年龄的增加与生存率的降低显著相关,但仅一项研究调查了合并症的预测价值。另一项研究表明,居住在养老院与生存机会降低独立相关。只有少数小型研究表明,年龄与幸存者的良好生活质量呈负相关。由于报告和统计方法的多样性,我们无法对可能的预测因素进行荟萃分析。
尽管在单变量分析中,老年患者 CPR 后的生存机会较低(即 4.1%),但年龄本身似乎不是拒绝患者 CPR 的好标准。关于合并症的预测价值以及年龄对幸存者生活质量的预测价值的证据很少。未来的研究应使用统一的方法报告数据和预先存在的因素,以增加有关预先存在的因素对生存机会的可用证据。此外,还应研究患者特定的结局,如生活质量和复苏后的认知功能。