Stieglis Remy, Verkaik Bas J, Tan Hanno L, Koster Rudolph W, van Schuppen Hans, van der Werf Christian
Anesthesiology, Amsterdam UMC Location AMC, the Netherlands (R.S., H.v.S.).
Quality of Care, Amsterdam Public Health, the Netherlands (R.S., H.v.S.).
Circulation. 2025 Jan 21;151(3):235-244. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.124.069834. Epub 2024 Oct 27.
In patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest who present with an initial shockable rhythm, a longer delay to the first shock decreases the probability of survival, often attributed to cerebral damage. The mechanisms of this decreased survival have not yet been elucidated. Estimating the probability of successful defibrillation and other factors in relation to the time to first shock may guide prehospital care systems to implement policies that improve patient survival by decreasing time to first shock.
Patients with a witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and ventricular fibrillation (VF) as an initial rhythm were included using the prospective ARREST registry (Amsterdam Resuscitation Studies). Patient and resuscitation data, including time-synchronized automated external defibrillator and manual defibrillator data, were analyzed to determine VF termination at 5 seconds after the first shock. Delay to first shock was defined as the time from initial emergency call until the first shock by any defibrillator. Outcomes were the proportion of VF termination, return of organized rhythm, and survival to discharge, all in relation to the delay to first shock. A Poisson regression model with robust standard errors was used to estimate the association between delay to first shock and outcomes.
Among 3723 patients, the proportion of VF termination declined from 93% when the delay to first shock was <6 minutes to 75% when that delay was >16 minutes (<0.001). Every additional minute in VF from emergency call was associated with 6% higher probability of failure to terminate VF (adjusted relative risk, 1.06 [95% CI, 1.04-1.07]), 4% lower probability of return of organized rhythm (adjusted relative risk, 0.96 [95% CI, 0.95-0.98]), and 6% lower probability of surviving to discharge (adjusted relative risk, 0.94 [95% CI, 0.93-0.95]).
Every minute of delay to first shock was associated with a significantly lower proportion of VF termination and return of organized rhythm. This may explain the worse outcomes in patients with a long delay to defibrillation. Reducing the time interval from emergency call to first shock to ≤6 minutes could be considered a key performance indicator of the chain of survival.
在院外心脏骤停且初始心律为可电击心律的患者中,首次电击延迟时间越长,生存概率越低,这通常归因于脑损伤。这种生存概率降低的机制尚未阐明。估计首次电击时间与成功除颤概率及其他因素之间的关系,可能会指导院前急救系统制定政策,通过缩短首次电击时间来提高患者生存率。
使用前瞻性ARREST注册研究(阿姆斯特丹复苏研究)纳入院外心脏骤停且初始心律为室颤(VF)的患者。分析患者及复苏数据,包括时间同步的自动体外除颤器和手动除颤器数据,以确定首次电击后5秒时室颤是否终止。首次电击延迟时间定义为从最初紧急呼叫到任何除颤器首次电击的时间。结局指标为室颤终止比例、恢复有组织心律比例和出院生存率,所有这些均与首次电击延迟时间相关。使用具有稳健标准误的泊松回归模型来估计首次电击延迟时间与结局之间的关联。
在3723例患者中,首次电击延迟时间<6分钟时室颤终止比例为93%,延迟时间>16分钟时降至75%(P<0.001)。从紧急呼叫开始,室颤每增加一分钟,室颤未终止的概率增加6%(调整后相对风险,1.06 [95%CI,1.04 - 1.