Early versus late advanced airway management for adult patients with out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest: A time‐dependent propensity score–matched analysis

Author:

Amagasa Shunsuke12ORCID,Iwamoto Shintaro3,Kashiura Masahiro2ORCID,Yasuda Hideto2,Kishihara Yuki2,Uematsu Satoko1,Moriya Takashi2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency and Transport Medicine National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Saitama Medical Center Jichi Medical University Saitama Japan

3. Department of Data Science, Clinical Research Center National Center for Child Health and Development Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe objective was to investigate whether early advanced airway management during the entire resuscitation period is associated with favorable neurological outcomes and survival in patients with out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA).MethodsWe performed a retrospective cohort study of patients with OHCA aged ≥18 years enrolled in OHCA registry in Japan who received advanced airway management during cardiac arrest between June 2014 and December 2020. To address resuscitation time bias, we performed risk set matching analyses in which patients who did and did not receive advanced airway management were matched at the same time point (min) using the time‐dependent propensity score; further, we compared early (≤10 min) and late (>10 min) advanced airway management. The primary and secondary outcome measures were favorable neurological outcomes using Cerebral Performance Category scores and survival at 1 month after cardiac arrest.ResultsOf the 41,101 eligible patients, 21,446 patients received early advanced airway management. Thus, risk set matching was performed with a total of 42,866 patients. In the main analysis, early advanced airway management was significantly associated with favorable neurological outcomes (risk ratio [RR] 0.997, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.995–0.999) and survival (RR 0.990, 95% CI 0.986–0.994) at 1 month after cardiac arrest. In the sensitivity analysis with early advanced airway management defined as ≤5 min and ≤20 min, the results were comparable.ConclusionsAlthough early advanced airway management was statistically significant for improved neurological outcomes and survival at 1 month after cardiac arrest, the RR was very close to 1, indicating that the timing of advanced airway management has minimal impact on clinical outcomes, and decisions should be made based on the individual needs of the patient.

Publisher

Wiley

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