Abstract
Background
Prehospital post-resuscitation hypotension and hypoxia have been associated with adverse outcomes in the context of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). We aimed to investigate the association between clinical outcomes and post-resuscitation hypoxia alone, hypotension alone, and combined hypoxia and hypotension.
Methods
We used the 2018–2021 ESO annual datasets to conduct this study. All EMS-treated non-traumatic OHCA patients who had a documented prehospital return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and two or more SpO2 readings and systolic blood pressures recorded were evaluated for inclusion. Patients who were less than 18 years of age, pregnant, had a do-not-resuscitate order or similar, achieved ROSC after bystander CPR only, or had an EMS-witnessed cardiac arrest were excluded. Multivariable logistic regression adjusted for standard Utstein factors and highest prehospital Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score was used to investigate the association between hypoxia, hypotension, and outcomes.
Results
We analyzed data for 17,943 patients, of whom 3,979 had hospital disposition data. Hypotension and hypoxia were not documented in 1,343 (33.8%) patients, 1,144 (28.8%) had only hypoxia documented, 507 (12.7%) had only hypotension documented, and 985 (24.8%) had both hypoxia and hypotension documented. In comparison to patients who did not have documented hypotension or hypoxia, patients who had documented hypoxia (aOR: 1.76 [1.38, 2.24]), documented hypotension (aOR: 3.00 [2.15, 4.18]), and documented hypoxia and hypotension combined (aOR: 4.87 [3.63, 6.53]) had significantly increased mortality. The relationship between mortality and vital sign abnormalities (hypoxia and hypotension > hypotension > hypoxia) was observed in every evaluated subgroup.
Conclusions
In this large dataset, hypotension and hypoxia were independently associated with mortality both alone and in combination. Compared to patients without documented hypotension and hypoxia, patients with documented hypotension and hypoxia had nearly five-fold greater odds of mortality.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank ESO for providing our team access to the data that made this study possible. In addition, we would like to express our sincere appreciation for the EMS clinicians who treated the many critically ill patients included in this research.
Disclosure statement
RPC is an employee of ESO Inc. The authors do not believe that they have any financial or intellectual relationships that would influence the reporting of the results contained within this study.