Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA.
Clin Ther. 2019 Jun;41(6):1029-1037. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2019.03.017. Epub 2019 Apr 30.
Women who experience out-of-hospital cardiac arrest have similar rates of survival to hospital admission as men; however, women are less likely to survive to hospital discharge. We hypothesized that women would have higher rates of "do not attempt resuscitation" (DNAR) orders and that this order would be associated with lower use of aggressive interventions.
We identified adult hospital admissions with a diagnosis of cardiac arrest (ICD-9 427.5) from the 2010 California State Inpatient Dataset. Multivariable logistic regression was used to test the association between patient sex and a DNAR order within the first 24 h of admission, adjusting for patient demographic characteristics and comorbid medical conditions. In secondary analysis, procedures performed after establishment of DNAR order and survival to hospital discharge were compared by sex.
We analyzed 6562 patients (44% women, 56% men) who experienced out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and survived to hospital admission. In unadjusted analysis, more women than men had establishment of a DNAR order during the first 24 h of admission (23.4% versus 19.3%; P < 0.01). After adjusting for age, race, and comorbid conditions, women remained significantly more likely to have a DNAR order established during the first 24 h of their hospital admission after cardiac arrest compared with men (odds ratio = 1.23; 95% CI, 1.09-1.40). No sex difference was found in procedures used after DNAR order was established.
Female survivors of cardiac arrest are significantly more likely than men to have a DNAR order established within the first 24 h of in-hospital treatment. The establishment of a DNAR order is associated with patients undergoing fewer procedures than individuals who do not have a DNAR order established. Given that patients who have a DNAR order receive less-aggressive intervention after arrest, it is possible that an early DNAR order may contribute to sex differences in survival to hospital discharge.
经历院外心脏骤停的女性与男性入院时的存活率相似;然而,女性出院存活率较低。我们假设女性会有更高的“不尝试复苏”(DNAR)医嘱率,并且该医嘱与更积极的干预措施的使用减少相关。
我们从 2010 年加利福尼亚州住院患者数据集确定了诊断为心脏骤停(ICD-9 427.5)的成年住院患者。使用多变量逻辑回归检验患者性别与入院后 24 小时内 DNAR 医嘱之间的关联,调整患者人口统计学特征和合并症医疗条件。在二次分析中,按性别比较建立 DNAR 医嘱后进行的程序和出院存活率。
我们分析了 6562 名经历院外心脏骤停并存活至入院的患者(44%为女性,56%为男性)。在未调整分析中,与男性相比,更多的女性在入院后 24 小时内建立了 DNAR 医嘱(23.4%对 19.3%;P<0.01)。在校正年龄、种族和合并症后,与男性相比,女性在心脏骤停后入院的前 24 小时内建立 DNAR 医嘱的可能性仍然显著更高(比值比=1.23;95%CI,1.09-1.40)。在建立 DNAR 医嘱后使用的程序中没有发现性别差异。
心脏骤停幸存者中,女性在入院后 24 小时内建立 DNAR 医嘱的可能性明显高于男性。建立 DNAR 医嘱与患者接受的程序少于未建立 DNAR 医嘱的患者相关。鉴于有 DNAR 医嘱的患者在心脏骤停后接受的干预措施不那么积极,因此早期的 DNAR 医嘱可能导致出院存活率的性别差异。