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Survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Europe - Results of the EuReCa TWO study

Authors :
Peter Wright
Johan Herlitz
Leo Bossaert
Jan Wnent
Violetta Raffay
Vitor H Correia
Hajriz Alihodžić
Joséphine Escutnaire
Nikolaos I. Nikolaou
Scott J. Booth
Roman Burkart
Ari Salo
Jan-Thorsten Gräsner
Pierre Mols
Anatolij Truhlář
Grzegorz Cebula
Anneli Strömsöe
Siobhán Masterson
Mads Wissenberg
Diana Cimpoesu
Ingvild Tjelmeland
Irzal Hadžibegović
Bergthor Steinn Jonsson
Bernd W. Böttiger
Stefan Trenkler
Carlo Clarens
Gavin D. Perkins
Federico Semeraro
Rudolph W. Koster
Andrej Markota
Holger Maurer
Endre Nagy
Rolf Lefering
Marios Ioannides
Fernando Rossell-Ortiz
Maximilian Moertl
Steffie Beesems
Cardiology
ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
Source :
Resuscitation, Resuscitation, 148, 218-226. Elsevier Ireland Ltd
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Background The epidemiology and outcome after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) varies across Europe. Following on from EuReCa ONE, the aim of this study was to further explore the incidence of and outcomes from OHCA in Europe and to improve understanding of the role of the bystander. Methods This prospective, multicentre study involved the collection of registry-based data over a three-month period (1st October 2017 to 31st December 2017). The core study dataset complied with the Utstein-style. Primary outcomes were return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and survival to hospital admission. Secondary outcome was survival to hospital discharge. Results All 28 countries provided data, covering a total population of 178,879,118. A total of 37,054 OHCA were confirmed, with CPR being started in 25,171 cases. The bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) rate ranged from 13% to 82% between countries (average: 58%). In one third of cases (33%) ROSC was achieved and 8% of patients were discharged from hospital alive. Survival to hospital discharge was higher in patients when a bystander performed CPR with ventilations, compared to compression-only CPR (14% vs. 8% respectively). Conclusion In addition to increasing our understanding of the role of bystander CPR within Europe, EuReCa TWO has confirmed large variation in OHCA incidence, characteristics and outcome, and highlighted the extent to which OHCA is a public health burden across Europe. Unexplained variation remains and the EuReCa network has a continuing role to play in improving the quality management of resuscitation. info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Details

ISSN :
03009572
Volume :
148
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Resuscitation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7a47a69e90e03c7a6a8cd60f7a7c84d4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2019.12.042