Between-centre differences in care for in-hospital cardiac arrest: a prospective cohort study

Author:

Gravesteijn B. Y.ORCID,Schluep M.,Lingsma H. F.,Stolker R. J.,Endeman H.,Hoeks S. E.,Wils Evert-Jan,Kuijs Cees,Blans Michiel,van den Bogaard Bas,Koopman – van Gemert Ankie,Hukshorn Chris,van der Meer Nardo,Knook Marco,van Melsen Trudy,Peters René,Perik Patrick,Assink Jan,Spijkers Gerben,Vermeijden Wytze,

Abstract

Abstract Background Survival after in-hospital cardiac arrest is poor, but current literature shows substantial heterogeneity in reported survival rates. This study aims to evaluate care for patients suffering in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) in the Netherlands by assessing between-hospital heterogeneity in outcomes and to explain this heterogeneity stemming from differences in case-mix or differences in quality of care. Methods A prospective multicentre study was conducted comprising 14 centres. All IHCA patients were included. The adjusted variation in structure and process indicators of quality of care and outcomes (in-hospital mortality and cerebral performance category [CPC] scale) was assessed with mixed effects regression with centre as random intercept. Variation was quantified using the median odds ratio (MOR), representing the expected odds ratio for poor outcome between two randomly picked centres. Results After excluding centres with less than 10 inclusions (2 centres), 701 patients were included of whom, 218 (32%) survived to hospital discharge. The unadjusted and case-mix adjusted MOR for mortality was 1.19 and 1.05, respectively. The unadjusted and adjusted MOR for CPC score was 1.24 and 1.19, respectively. In hospitals where personnel received cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training twice per year, 183 (64.7%) versus 290 (71.4%) patients died or were in a vegetative state, and 59 (20.8%) versus 68 (16.7%) patients showed full recovery (p < 0.001). Conclusion In the Netherlands, survival after IHCA is relatively high and between-centre differences in outcomes are small. The existing differences in survival are mainly attributable to differences in case-mix. Variation in neurological outcome is less attributable to case-mix.

Funder

European Society of Anaesthesiology

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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