医学
体外膜肺氧合
医疗成本与利用项目
逻辑回归
急诊医学
经皮冠状动脉介入治疗
死亡率
内科学
重症监护医学
心肌梗塞
医疗保健
经济增长
经济
作者
George Gill,Jignesh Patel,Diego Casali,Georgina Rowe,Hongdao Meng,Dominick Megna,Joanna Chikwe,Puja B. Parikh
标识
DOI:10.1161/jaha.121.021406
摘要
Background Factors associated with poor prognosis following receipt of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in adults with cardiac arrest remain unclear. We aimed to identify predictors of mortality in adults with cardiac arrest receiving ECMO in a nationally representative sample. Methods and Results The US Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project's National Inpatient Sample was used to identify 782 adults hospitalized with cardiac arrest who received ECMO between 2006 and 2014. The primary outcome of interest was all-cause in-hospital mortality. Factors associated with mortality were analyzed using multivariable logistic regression. The overall in-hospital mortality rate was 60.4% (n=472). Patients who died were older and more often men, of non-White race, and with lower household income than those surviving to discharge. In the risk-adjusted analysis, independent predictors of mortality included older age, male sex, lower annual income, absence of ventricular arrhythmia, absence of percutaneous coronary intervention, and presence of therapeutic hypothermia. Conclusions Demographic and therapeutic factors are independently associated with mortality in patients with cardiac arrest receiving ECMO. Identification of which patients with cardiac arrest may receive the utmost benefit from ECMO may aid with decision-making regarding its implementation. Larger-scale studies are warranted to assess the appropriate candidates for ECMO in cardiac arrest.
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