Dewidar Omar, Blewer Audrey L, Rios Marina Del, Morrison Laurie J
Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Bruyère Health Research Institute, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Family Medicine & Community Health and Department of Population Health Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States; Duke University School of Nursing, Durham, NC, United States; Health Services and Systems Research, Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore, Singapore.
Resuscitation. 2025 Feb;207:110512. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2025.110512. Epub 2025 Jan 21.
Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) is increasingly used for adults with cardiac arrest (CA) refractory to Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS). Concerns exist that adding ECPR could worsen health inequities, defined as differences in health outcomes that are unfair or unjust. Current guidelines do not explicitly address this issue. This study narratively reviews the latest evidence on ECPR, focusing on its implications for health equity and derives a health equity tool that may serve as a basis of comparison for resuscitation sciences.
We searched the American Heart Association (AHA) and International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) websites for the latest ACLS guidelines and scientific summaries on ECPR for CA and identified randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies. We identified population and individual characteristics associated with inequities based on the literature and expert opinion. These characteristics were used as a health equity tool to assess: differences in baseline risk, population exclusion and trial representation in studies, outcome analyses, and implementation barriers. We used the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations (GRADE) Evidence to Decision (EtD) framework to evaluate ECPR's impact on health equity.
Four RCTs involving 435 patients were conducted in the (2/4) USA, (1/4) Czech Republic, and (1/4) Netherlands. We identified thirteen characteristics associated with health inequities. All trials took place in urban, high-resourced hospitals and excluded older adults (60-75+ years). Across all RCTs, women were under-represented, and in the two USA-based trials, Black individuals were under-represented. There was no difference in baseline rate of survival with minimal or no neurologic impairment between sexes, but an observed trend favoring younger patients (<65). One trial's subgroup analysis showed no significant differences in ECPR effectiveness by sex or age. We noted that implementing ECPR for out-of-hospital CA faces challenges due to demographic variability, differences in emergency services, access to existing ECPR programs, and limited implementation outside urban areas.
A health equity tool based on axes of health inequities for resuscitation identified that health equity is reduced with the use of ECPR for CA. Mitigation strategies should involve evaluating demographics, health equity measures, outcomes and ensuring equitable access to ECPR across catchment areas before and after implementation.
体外心肺复苏(ECPR)越来越多地用于对高级心血管生命支持(ACLS)无反应的心脏骤停(CA)成人患者。有人担心增加ECPR可能会加剧健康不平等,即健康结果的差异是不公平或不公正的。目前的指南并未明确解决这一问题。本研究对ECPR的最新证据进行了叙述性综述,重点关注其对健康公平的影响,并得出一种健康公平工具,可作为复苏科学比较基础。
我们在美国心脏协会(AHA)和国际复苏委员会(ILCOR)网站上搜索了关于CA的最新ACLS指南和ECPR科学总结,并确定了随机对照试验(RCT)和观察性研究。我们根据文献和专家意见确定了与不平等相关的人群和个体特征。这些特征被用作一种健康公平工具,以评估:基线风险差异、研究中的人群排除和试验代表性、结果分析以及实施障碍。我们使用推荐分级、评估、制定和评价(GRADE)证据到决策(EtD)框架来评估ECPR对健康公平的影响。
四项涉及435名患者的RCT分别在美国(2/4)、捷克共和国((1/4))和荷兰(1/4)进行。我们确定了13个与健康不平等相关的特征。所有试验均在城市高资源医院进行,排除了老年人(60 - 75岁以上)。在所有RCT中,女性代表性不足,在美国的两项试验中,黑人代表性不足。性别之间在最低或无神经功能障碍的基线生存率方面没有差异,但观察到有利于年轻患者(<65岁)的趋势。一项试验的亚组分析显示,ECPR有效性在性别或年龄方面无显著差异。我们注意到对于院外CA实施ECPR面临挑战,原因包括人口统计学差异、紧急服务差异、现有ECPR项目的可及性以及城市以外地区实施有限。
基于复苏健康不平等轴的健康公平工具表明,对CA使用ECPR会降低健康公平性。缓解策略应包括评估人口统计学、健康公平措施、结果,并确保在实施前后整个集水区公平获得ECPR。