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Resuscitation (2008) 76, 207—213
available at www.sciencedirect.com
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/resuscitation
CLINICAL PAPER
Who survives from out-of-hospital pulseless
electrical activity?夽
Taneli Väyrynen ∗, Markku Kuisma, Teuvo Määttä, James Boyd
Helsinki Emergency Medical Services (EMS), Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine,
Helsinki University Central Hospital, P.O. Box 112, FIN-00099 Helsingin Kaupunki, Finland
Received 9 March 2007; received in revised form 9 July 2007; accepted 19 July 2007
KEYWORDS
Pulseless electrical
activity (PEA);
Out-of-hospital CPR;
Outcome;
Bystander-CPR
Summary
Aim of the study: To study factors associated with short-term and long-term survival after
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest presenting with pulseless electrical activity (PEA).
Materials and methods: This was a retrospective observational study. All out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in Helsinki, Finland during 1 January1997—31 December 2005 were prospectively
registered in the cardiac arrest database. Of 3291 arrests 984 had PEA as the first registered
rhythm.
Results: The use of adrenaline was the only factor associated with long-term survival, by increasing mortality. Increasing delay to the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) was the only
factor associated with survival among patients that survived to admission, also by increasing
mortality. There were no survivors that were discharged in overall performance category (OPC)
1—2 after a bystander-witnessed arrest (excluding cases of hypothermia and/or near-drowning)
with first responding unit (FRU)-delay over 14 min, or that were resuscitated for more than
20 min. There were no survivors who were discharged in OPC 1—2 after an unwitnessed arrest
with the duration of advanced life support (ALS) exceeding 5.5 min.
Conclusions: The use of adrenaline during resuscitation was the only significant factor which
was found to decrease the long-term survival. Among admitted patients, short delay to ROSC
was the only factor associated with increased survival. Bystander-CPR and delays to the arrival
of the FRU or to the initiation of ALS were not associated with survival. Therefore, it seems
difficult to increase survival rates of PEA by improving the chain of survival. More effort should
be put to education of the public to call for an ambulance before the cardiac arrest occurs.
© 2007 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Introduction
夽 A Spanish translated version of the summary of this article appears as Appendix in the final online version at
10.1016/j.resuscitation.2007.07.023.
∗ Corresponding author. Fax: +358 931030189.
E-mail address: Taneli.vayrynen@hus.fi (T. Väyrynen).
Pulseless electrical activity (PEA) is defined as (organised)
cardiac electrical activity in the absence of any palpable pulses. Out-of-hospital PEA has poor prognosis, with
2.4—6.5% of patients surviving to hospital discharge.1—3
0300-9572/$ — see front matter © 2007 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2007.07.023
208
It has been shown that the presence of cardiac contractions (verified by cardiac ultrasound examination during the
arrest) is associated with survival.4—6 Due to the subjective
nature of the diagnostic criteria for PEA, the circulatory
status of patients judged to have PEA may range from
total cardiac standstill to profound shock (pseudo-PEA) without a palpable pulse due to severe hypotension. Palpation
of carotid pulses may be difficult due to anatomical reasons (e.g. obesity), circumstances of the arrest (e.g. in the
street in cold weather) or inexperience of the person palpating the pulse. Recognition of pulselessness by palpation
of the carotid pulse performed by the first responders is
inaccurate.7 In asystole and ventricular fibrillation (VF) the
diagnosis can be made from the ECG-tracing, and once the
diagnosis is established it is assured that the patient is in
true cardiac arrest.
Poor prognosis after out-of-hospital PEA has been
reported after blunt trauma,8 unwitnessed arrests (especially in the geriatric population)2,3,9 and if bystander-CPR
is not provided.2 Our hypothesis is that due to the diversity
of haemodynamic states judged to be PEA, there are few
factors (compared to VF and asystole) that are associated
with survival. Therefore it may be even more difficult to
predict the prognosis in individual cases. We suspect that
the marginal perfusion provided by the cardiac contractions
may cause all delays to be less important in PEA than in the
other initial rhythms of cardiac arrest.
The purpose of this study was to describe factors associated with short- and long-term survival among 984 patients
judged as having PEA as the initial rhythm of out-of-hospital
cardiac arrest. Short-term survival was defined as survival
to hospital admission and long-term survival was defined as
survival to 30 days after the arrest.
Materials and methods
Study setting
Helsinki is a middle-sized urban city with 559,000 inhabitants. It is served by a three-tiered Emergency Medical
Services (EMS) consisting of seven to eight BLS-units depending on the time of the day, five advanced life support
(ALS)-units (of which three are ambulances, one is a medical supervisor unit and one is a fire engine) and a physician
staffed mobile intensive care unit (MICU). Units are distributed to eight regional rescue stations. According to
dispatching protocols, in suspected cardiac arrest at least
two units (of which one is an ALS-unit) are dispatched. If a
fire engine can reach the scene faster than an ambulance it
is used as a first responding unit (FRU). There are seven fire
engines that provide the same level of care as BLS ambulances. If cardiac arrest is not suspected and the patients’
risk is considered to be low or intermediate, an ALS-unit is
dispatched only if the scene is within the unit’s own area.
If a BLS-unit finds a patient in unsuspected cardiac arrest,
an ALS-unit is requested from the dispatching centre and
resuscitation is initiated. The time intervals are calculated
from the beginning of the emergency call (time zero) to the
arrival of BLS and ALS units at the patients’ side. In EMS witnessed arrests the actual time of collapse is used as time
zero.
T. Väyrynen et al.
In Helsinki EMS all BLS-units are capable of defibrillation, intubation of an adult cardiac arrest victim and
basic cardiopulmonary resuscitation. ALS units are equipped
additionally with i.v. medications, e.g. adrenaline and amiodarone. Guidelines used in cardiopulmonary resuscitation of
PEA follow international recommendations, with adrenaline
[epinephrine] (1 mg at 3—5 min intervals) as the vasopressor.
No other drugs such as atropine are given routinely during
CPR. Drugs are given either into the external jugular or the
antecubital vein. Intubation precedes i.v. access in priority.
Patients are intubated routinely as soon as possible. If intubation by an EMT or a paramedic cannot be done with two
attempts bag-valve mask ventilation is carried out until the
arrival of MICU.
According to Helsinki EMS do-not-attempt resuscitation
(DNAR) guidelines resuscitation is not attempted in PEA
(excluding cases of hypothermia and/or near-drowning) if
the patient has a living will or terminal illness, traumatic
arrest or when resuscitation (including bystander-CPR) has
not been initiated within 15 min. Resuscitation is terminated
according to DNAR guidelines after 20 min of resuscitation in
PEA. The decision to withhold resuscitation or to terminate
ongoing resuscitation is always made by a physician. DNAR
guidelines were introduced by the end of 1997.
Data collection
The Institutional Review Board of Helsinki University Hospital approved the study. The study plan was retrospective
but the data were collected prospectively by EMS-physicians
into the cardiac arrest database. The on-call physician
completed a data collection form based on Utstein recommendations immediately after arrest. Information regarding
the cause of arrest, survival to discharge and overall performance category (OPC) on discharge were achieved later
from hospital files by a physician responsible for the maintenance of the database. Patients were assigned to OPC
1—4 according to hospital records at the time of hospital discharge. OPC 1 includes patients with full functional
recovery, OPC 2 includes patients with moderate disability
(but still able to perform independently in daily activities),
OPC 3 includes patients with severe disability (in need of
assistance in daily activities) and patients in OPC 4 are in
a coma. The definition for discharged alive was that after
hospital care was not needed any more. Patients were discharged from hospital either to their homes or in some cases
to nursing homes. No arrested patient with secondary sign
of death (rigor mortis, dependent lividity) were included for
analysis.
Statistical methods
For normally distributed continuous variables mean and
standard deviation (S.D.) are presented and independent
samples T-test is used as a test of significance. Median
and interquartile range (IQR) are presented for nonparametrically distributed data and Mann—Whitney U-test is
used as a test of significance. All categorical variables were
analysed using chi-square test or Fischer’s exact test. All
significance tests were two-tailed with p less than 0.05 considered significant. Logistic regression was used to calculate
Who survives from out-of-hospital PEA?
209
adjusted odd ratios (OR) for short- and long-term mortality
using variables that were univariately associated with shortand long-term survival with significance of p < 0.5. In the
univariate analysis continuous variables were dichotomized
according to mean or median values. In the multivariate
analysis continuous variables were used and FRU and ALS
delays were transformed to natural logarithmic scale due
to their skewed distribution. Hosmer—Lemeshow-test was
used to assess the goodness of fit of these models. Reasonable fit was assumed since the results were not significant. A
sample size calculation was not performed since this was a
retrospective study in which all patients in the Helsinki EMS
cardiac arrest database were included.
Results
During the study period (1 January1997—31 December 2005)
there were 3291 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests. The initial
rhythm was PEA in 984 (29.9%) cases. These 984 arrests form
the study population.
The cardiac arrest was bystander-witnessed in 55.2%
(n = 543), witnessed by EMS-personnel in 30.9% (n = 304) and
unwitnessed in 13.8% (n = 136) of cases. Data regarding the
witness status of one patient was missing. Resuscitation
was attempted in 80.2% (n = 789) of arrests. The majority (68.2%, n = 133) of decisions to withhold resuscitation
were based on Helsinki EMS DNAR guidelines. Survival to
hospital admission rate was 25.7% (n = 253). In-hospital mortality rate was 75.1%. Survival to discharge rate was 6.4%
(n = 63), and 5.8% (n = 57) were alive 30 days after the arrest.
Seventy-one percent (n = 45) of discharged patients were in
OPC 1—2. Long-term survival rate was 5.7% in bystanderwitnessed arrests, 3.7% in unwitnessed arrests and 6.9% in
EMS-witnessed arrests.
Characteristics of long-term survivors and those who died
within 30 days of the arrest are presented in Table 1. Cases in
which resuscitation was not attempted are excluded. Longterm survivors had significantly shorter ROSC delays and
had received adrenaline less frequently and in smaller total
Table 1
amounts. There were non-significant trends (with p < 0.2)
towards survivors being younger, having received bystanderCPR less frequently, having shorter FRU delays and also being
defibrillated less often. Total incidence of bystander-CPR in
PEA (excluding EMS-witnessed arrests) was 29.5% in arrests
in which resuscitation was attempted and 32.6% if all arrests
were included.
Results of the univariate analysis are presented in
Table 2. Arrests in which resuscitation was not attempted
were excluded. Cardiac cause and defibrillation (in case
of conversion of PEA into a shockable rhythm) were associated with decreased short-term survival rate and use of
adrenaline was associated with decreased long-term survival rate. All factors that were associated with survival
with p < 0.5 were included in multivariate analysis. Results
of the multivariate analysis are shown in Table 3. The use
of adrenaline in resuscitation was the only significant factor
found and was associated with decreased long-term survival.
Results of the univariate analysis of factors associated
with 30-day survival among admitted patients are presented in Table 4. ROSC-delay under 19 min and the use
of adrenaline were the only factors univariately associated
with survival. Shorter delays to ROSC increased the survival
rate and use of adrenaline decreased the survival rate. All
factors that were associated with survival (with p < 0.5) were
included in multivariate analysis. Increasing ROSC delay was
the only significant factor, which will decrease the chance of
survival. Adjusted OR for survival for increasing ROSC delay
(per minute) was 0.92, 95% CI 0.85—0.995 (p = 0.037).
Survival to different end-points according to confirmed
diagnosis is presented in Table 5. Cardiac cause was the
most common diagnosis among long-term survivors. Of the
25 long-term survivors with cardiac aetiology, 6 had suffered a myocardial infarction. In-hospital mortality rate
after arrests due to a cardiac cause was 72.1%.
There were no survivors to discharge in OPC 1—2 after a
bystander-witnessed arrest (excluding cases of hypothermia
and/or near-drowning) with an FRU-delay over 14 min, or
who were resuscitated for more than 20 min. There was no
survivors to discharge from hospital in OPC 1—2 after an
Characteristics of long-term survivors and non-survivors
Male (gender)
Age (years)
Arrest at home
Bystander-witnessed arrest
B-CPRa (data missing: 0, 9)
FRU-delay (data missing: 1, 3)
ALS-delay (data missing: 1, 8)
ROSC-delay (data missing: 3, 11)
Adrenaline used
Amount of adrenaline (mg)
Defibrillated
Cardiac cause (data missing: 0, 98)
n (%)
Mean (S.D.)
n (%)
n (%)
n (%)
Median (IQR)
Median (IQR)
Median (IQR)
n (%)
Median (IQR)
n (%)
n (%)
Long-term survivors
(n = 57)
Non-survivors
(n = 732)
p
40 (70.2)
63 (17)
31 (54.4)
31 (54.4)
8 (16.7)
5 (0—8.5)
9 (4.5—13.5)
16 (7—21)
39 (68.4)
2 (0—3)
9 (15.8)
25 (43.9)
448 (61.2)
67 (17)
458 (62.6)
412 (56.3)
174 (28.1)
7 (0—10)
10 (5—14)
20 (14—26)
664 (90.7)
4 (2—5)
189 (25.8)
336 (47.9)
0.204
0.097
0.257
0.784
0.094
0.166
0.221
<0.0001
<0.0001
0.006
0.112
0.213
Arrests in which resuscitation was not attempted are excluded. B-CPR, bystander-cardiopulmonary resuscitation; FRU, first responding
unit; ALS, advanced life support; ROSC, return of spontaneous circulation.
a Arrests witnessed by the ambulance personnel are excluded. Number of cases with missing data are given for both groups, respectively.
210
Table 2
Results of the univariate analysis
Short-term
survival rate (%)
OR
95% CI
p
Long-term
survival rate (%)
OR
95% CI
p
Male gender
Yes
No
30.5
34.2
0.845
0.622—1.148
0.307
8.2
5.6
2.492
0.830—2.682
0.204
Age under 66 years
Yes
No
34.8
30.1
1.244
0.917—1.687
0.161
7.7
6.9
1.134
0.657—1.959
0.674
Arrest at home
Yes
No
29.9
35.3
0.779
0.574—1.058
0.116
6.3
8.7
0.713
0.415—1.227
0.257
Cardiac cause
Yes
No
28.5
44.8
0.491
0.358—0.673
<0.0001
6.9
9.7
0.693
0.401—1.196
0.213
Bystander-witnessed arrest
Yes
No
32.5
31.2
1.061
0.785—1.436
0.758
7.0
7.5
0.926
0.539—1.591
0.784
Bystander-CPR
Yes
No
29.1
33.8
0.804
0.555—1.165
0.266
4.4
8.2
0.511
0.235—1.115
0.094
FRU-delay under 7 min
Yes
No
31.2
32.2
0.952
0.705—1.287
0.76
8.0
6.3
1.292
0.748—2.232
0.406
ALS-delay under 9.5 min
Yes
No
31.3
32.0
0.969
0.716—1.310
0.878
7.6
6.8
1.141
0.662—1.967
0.678
Adrenaline used
Yes
No
28.2
62.8
0.232
0.146—0.371
<0.0001
5.5
20.9
0.222
0.120—0.409
<0.0001
Defibrillated
Yes
No
22.7
35.0
0.547
0.376—0.792
0.001
4.5
8.1
0.539
0.259—1.119
0.112
Continuous variables were dichotomised according to their mean or median values. CPR, cardiopulmonary resuscitation; FRU, first responding unit; ALS, advanced life support; OR, odds
ratio and CI, confidence interval. OR value above 1 indicates increased chance of survival.
T. Väyrynen et al.
Who survives from out-of-hospital PEA?
Table 3
211
Results of the multivariate analysis
Short-term survival
Cardiac cause
Adrenaline used
Defibrillated
Long-term survival
Adjusted OR
95% CI
p
Adjusted OR
95% CI
p
0.55
0.23
0.65
0.38—0.81
0.13—0.41
0.42—0.99
0.002
<0.0001
0.046
0.16
0.07—0.35
<0.0001
Short-term mortality is mortality before hospital admission, long-term mortality is mortality within 30 days of the cardiac arrest. Only
significant (p < 0.05) associations are shown. OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval. OR value above 1 indicates increased chance of
mortality.
Table 4
Univariate analysis of long-term survival among admitted patients
Survival rate (%)
OR
95% CI
p
Gender Male
Yes
No
26.7
16.5
1.84
0.976—3.467
0.067
Age under 64 years
Yes
No
21.6
23.2
0.911
0.498—1.668
0.878
Arrest at home
Yes
No
21.1
24.5
0.882
0.454—1.489
0.544
Cardiac cause
Yes
No
24.0
21.6
1.147
0.632—2.082
0.650
Bystander-witnessed arrest
Yes
No
21.5
23.9
0.876
0.484—1.585
0.761
Bystander-CPR
Yes
No
15.1
24.2
0.556
0.242—1.277
0.186
FRU-delay under 7 min
Yes
No
25.6
19.4
1.433
0.788—2.605
0.288
ALS-delay under 10 min
Yes
No
25.4
19.8
1.376
0.757—2.503
0.362
ROSC-delay under 19 min
Yes
No
30.1
15.4
2.367
1.269—4.415
0.008
Adrenaline used
Yes
No
19.7
32.7
0.504
0.260—0.979
0.046
Defibrillated
Yes
No
20.0
23.1
0.833
0.375—1.852
0.844
Continuous variables were dichotomised according to their mean or median values. CPR, cardiopulmonary resuscitation; FRU, first
responding unit; ALS, advanced life support; ROSC, return of spontaneous circulation; OR, odds ratio and CI, confidence interval. OR
value above 1 indicates increased chance of survival.
unwitnessed arrest with duration of resuscitation exceeding
14 min or duration of ALS exceeding 5.5 min.
Discussion
The use of adrenaline was the only factor associated with
long-term mortality among arrests in which resuscitation
was attempted. Survival to 30 days was reduced by over six
times if adrenaline was used during the resuscitation. When
the subgroup of patients who survived to hospital admission
was analysed, a short delay to ROSC was the only factor
associated with survival. Both the use of adrenaline and the
ROSC delay are factors that are associated with the duration
of resuscitation, i.e. the patients’ responsiveness to resuscitative measures. It was possible that majority of survivors
were in fact in pseudo-PEA and therefore responded rapidly
to resuscitative measures. Since bystander-CPR and delays
to the arrival of the FRU or to the initiation of ALS were not
associated with survival, it seems difficult to increase the
survival rate from PEA by further improving the chain of survival. Since EMS-witnessed arrests have the highest survival
rate, the public should be educated to recognise the warning
signs and to call for help before the cardiac arrest occurs. It
is probable that the wide spectrum of haemodynamic states
that can be judged to be PEA is a major confounding factor in
the prognostication of PEA. Some of the patients are in true
cardiac arrest while others are merely in profound shock.
212
Table 5
(%)
T. Väyrynen et al.
Confirmed diagnosis of patients that survived to hospital admission, hospital discharge or 30 days after the arrest, n
Admitted to hospital
(n = 253)
Cardiac cause
Pulmonary embolism
Trauma
Intoxication
Bleeding (without trauma)
Suffocation
Drowning
Seizure
Pneumonia
Hanging
Asthma
Cerebrovascular accident/stroke
Sepsis
Malignancy
Carbon monoxide poisoning
Pancreatitis
Other obvious cause
Data missing
104 (41.1)
18 (7.1)
14 (5.5)
12 (4.7)
10 (4.0)
13 (5.1)
6 (2.4)
5 (2.0)
11 (4.3)
2 (0.8)
4 (1.6)
32 (12.6)
2 (0.8)
1 (0.4)
1 (0.4)
1 (0.4)
16 (6.3)
1 (0.4)
Discharged from
hospital (n = 63)
29
7
6
4
3
3
3
2
2
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
(46)
(11)
(10)
(6)
(5)
(5)
(5)
(3)
(3)
(2)
(2)
(0)
(0)
(0)
(0)
(0)
(3)
(0)
Long-term survival
(n = 57)
25
7
6
4
3
3
2
2
2
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
(44)
(12)
(11)
(7)
(5)
(5)
(4)
(4)
(4)
(2)
(2)
(0)
(0)
(0)
(0)
(0)
(2)
(0)
Hypothermia was the cause of the arrest of the only long-term survivor in the ‘‘other obvious cause’’-category.
Cardiac ultrasound examination during the arrest could aid
in the differentiation of these states and the evaluation of
the prognosis of individual patients.
It is also difficult to recognise subgroups that do not benefit from resuscitation. There was no survivor discharged
from hospital in OPC 1—2 after bystander-witnessed arrest
if the FRU-delay was over 15 min, and in the previous
study by Engdahl et al. there were no survivors at all if
the FRU-delay exceeded 15 min. Therefore it seems that
resuscitation is not beneficial and should probably be withheld if the patient is not reached within 15 min after
bystander-witnessed arrest. However, it should be remembered that only a small minority of patients in an urban
environment experience such a long delay. There were no
long-term survivors who were discharged in OPC 1—2 after
bystander-witnessed arrest who were resuscitated for more
than 20 min. Prognosis was poorer in unwitnessed than witnessed arrests, but still 3.7% survived after an unwitnessed
arrest. As all survivors from unwitnessed PEA responded to
ALS very rapidly, prolonged efforts may be futile in this
subgroup.
Contradicting the previous findings by Engdahl et al.,
bystander-CPR was not beneficial in this study. In our study
the incidence of bystander-CPR was high compared to the
previous study by Engdahl et al. (29.5% versus 6.6—10.2%).
The incidence of bystander-CPR was lower among survivors
in our study, but not reaching statistical significance. In the
previous study the incidence of bystander-CPR was significantly higher among survivors than in non-survivors (28%
versus 8%, p = 0.008). It is possible that in the previous study
bystanders initiated resuscitation in cases that had a better prognosis per se, since the incidence was significantly
lower. It is also possible that bystander-CPR is associated
with shorter delay to call-for-help, but since the delay to the
arrival of the FRU was not associated with survival it should
not alter survival rates significantly. Quality of bystanderCPR may also vary. It is highly speculative whether the
marginal perfusion provided by the cardiac contractions in
pseudo-PEA diminishes the benefit from bystander-CPR, and
the survivors will ultimately survive regardless of bystanderCPR.
There were also differences in survival, compared to previous results by Engdahl et al. In our study survival rate to
hospital discharge was higher (6.4% versus 2.4%) and the
proportion of survivors in OPC 1—2 was also higher (over
70% versus almost 50%). More arrests were witnessed in
the present study, which may explain the difference in the
survival rates at least partly. In particular the number of
EMS-witnessed arrests was high in the present study. The
incidence of bystander-CPR was also higher in the present
study, but in our multivariate analysis it was not associated
with survival. Patients in our study were younger, which
may explain at least partly both the higher survival rate
and lower incidence of cardiac aetiology. It is also possible that the execution of resuscitation is different, and that
intra-resuscitation delays to different interventions (i.e.
intubation, intravenous access, and administration of medications) may differ.
There are some limitations to this study. Due to the
nature of the diagnostic criteria for PEA, there may be differences in the incidence of PEA and pseudo-PEA between
EMS systems. In some cases, PEA with a low frequency of
electrical complexes may be judged to be asystole. Survival
rates and factors associated with survival in different EMSsystems may vary more in PEA than in asystole or VF. There
are also major differences between different EMS systems,
in terms of structure of the EMS (BLS, ALS or a multi-tiered
system) and time delays to the initiation of the treatment.
Therefore these results may not be applicable to all EMS
systems.
Who survives from out-of-hospital PEA?
Conclusions
The only factor associated with long-term survival was the
use of adrenaline during resuscitation. The chance of death
was over six times higher if adrenaline was used. Among
patients who were admitted, a short delay to ROSC was the
only factor associated with improved survival. BystanderCPR and delays to the arrival of the FRU or to the initiation
of ALS were not associated with survival. Therefore it seems
difficult to increase survival rates from PEA by improving the
chain of survival, besides by educating the public to call for
help before the cardiac arrest occurs. Prognosis is poor if
the FRU-delay is over 15 min in bystander-witnessed arrests
or if the duration of ALS exceeds 5.5 min in EMS-witnessed
arrests, excluding cases of hypothermia and near-drowning.
Conflicts of interest
There authors hereby state that there is no conflict of
interest.
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