Starks Monique A, Chu Jamal, Leung K H Benjamin, Blewer Audrey L, Simmons Denise, Hansen Carolina Malta, Joiner Anjni, Cabañas José G, Harmody Matthew R, Nelson R Darrell, McNally Bryan F, Ornato Joseph P, Granger Christopher B, Chan Timothy C Y, Mark Daniel B
Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Division of Cardiology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
JACC Adv. 2024 Jun 25;3(7):101033. doi: 10.1016/j.jacadv.2024.101033. eCollection 2024 Jul.
Defibrillation in the critical first minutes of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) can significantly improve survival. However, timely access to automated external defibrillators (AEDs) remains a barrier.
The authors estimated the impact of a statewide program for drone-delivered AEDs in North Carolina integrated into emergency medical service and first responder (FR) response for OHCA.
Using Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival registry data, we included 28,292 OHCA patients ≥18 years of age between 1 January 2013 and 31 December 2019 in 48 North Carolina counties. We estimated the improvement in response times (time from 9-1-1 call to AED arrival) achieved by 2 sequential interventions: 1) AEDs for all FRs; and 2) optimized placement of drones to maximize 5-minute AED arrival within each county. Interventions were evaluated with logistic regression models to estimate changes in initial shockable rhythm and survival.
Historical county-level median response times were 8.0 minutes (IQR: 7.0-9.0 minutes) with 16.5% of OHCAs having AED arrival times of <5 minutes (IQR: 11.2%-24.3%). Providing all FRs with AEDs improved median response to 7.0 minutes (IQR: 6.2-7.8 minutes) and increased OHCAs with <5-minute AED arrival to 22.3% (IQR: 16.4%-30.9%). Further incorporating optimized drone networks (326 drones across all 48 counties) improved median response to 4.8 minutes (IQR: 4.3-5.2 minutes) and OHCAs with <5-minute AED arrival to 56.3% (IQR: 46.9%-64.2%). Survival rates were estimated to increase by 34% for witnessed OHCAs with estimated drone arrival <5 minutes and ahead of FR and emergency medical service.
Deployment of AEDs by FRs and optimized drone delivery can improve AED arrival times which may lead to improved clinical outcomes. Implementation studies are needed.
在院外心脏骤停(OHCA)的关键最初几分钟内进行除颤可显著提高生存率。然而,及时获取自动体外除颤器(AED)仍然是一个障碍。
作者估计了北卡罗来纳州一项全州范围的无人机配送AED项目的影响,该项目已纳入紧急医疗服务和急救人员(FR)对OHCA的响应中。
利用心脏骤停登记以提高生存率登记数据,我们纳入了2013年1月1日至2019年12月31日期间北卡罗来纳州48个县的28292例年龄≥18岁的OHCA患者。我们估计了通过2项连续干预措施实现的响应时间(从拨打9 - 1 - 1到AED到达的时间)的改善:1)为所有急救人员配备AED;2)优化无人机布局以在每个县内最大限度地实现AED在5分钟内到达。通过逻辑回归模型评估干预措施,以估计初始可电击心律和生存率的变化。
历史县级中位响应时间为8.0分钟(四分位间距:7.0 - 9.0分钟),16.5%的OHCA患者AED到达时间<5分钟(四分位间距:11.2% - 24.3%)。为所有急救人员配备AED后,中位响应时间改善至7.0分钟(四分位间距:6.2 - 7.8分钟),AED在5分钟内到达的OHCA患者比例增加至22.3%(四分位间距:16.4% - 30.9%)。进一步纳入优化的无人机网络(48个县共326架无人机)后,中位响应时间改善至4.8分钟(四分位间距:4.3 - 5.2分钟),AED在5分钟内到达的OHCA患者比例增加至56.3%(四分位间距:46.9% - 64.2%)。估计无人机到达时间<5分钟且早于急救人员和紧急医疗服务人员到达的目击OHCA患者的生存率将提高34%。
急救人员部署AED以及优化无人机配送可改善AED到达时间,这可能会改善临床结局。需要开展实施研究。