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This study evaluates patients suffering from traumatic cardiac arrest assessed by the Danish HEMS between 2016 and 2021. The primary outcome is 30-day survival; secondary outcomes are status at admission to the hospital and prehospital return of spontaneous circulation. Further, the prehospital critical care was identified and evaluated.
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Background Traumatic cardiac arrest (TCA) is associated with a poor prognosis, [1-3] and prompt, evidence-based treatment is paramount for increasing survival rates.
Cardiac arrest from traumatic origin is characterised as the end state of decompensated haemorrhagic shock, hypoxemia and/or obstructive shock.[1,4] Hypovolaemia and traumatic brain injury account for most cases, accounting for almost 90% of all TCAs.[5] Managing TCA relies on a time-critical assessment of reversible causes, which takes priority over chest compressions and simultaneous management of reversible causes.[1] Thus, TCA mandates urgent action in specialised prehospital treatment and further in-hospital advanced care in specialised trauma centres. [1] Potentially reversible causes of TCA include hypoxaemia, hypovolaemia and obstructive shock.[1,4] Earlier, resuscitation from TCA was considered futile due to meagre survival rates, yet survival has improved through the last decades. [5] Still, substantial variations in survival are seen across different populations. [4-7] Rapid transportation to specialised capacity, the role of the HEMS as an integrated function of the trauma system and the expertise of the helicopter crew are all factors that have been used to explain the benefits associated with using the HEMS in the trauma setting. [8-10] In-depth knowledge of the epidemiology of TCA is essential to improve care within this diverse subgroup of cardiac arrests. The hypothesis is that this novel data on TCA provide new and central data on reversible causes and treatment of these, which are linked to enhanced survival of cardiac arrest of traumatic origin.
Thus, the primary objective of the present study is to investigate the characteristics of patients to whom the Danish HEMS was dispatched who suffered from TCA. This assessment will be done by assessing the incidence, prognostic factors, critical care interventions, and survival from cardiac arrest of traumatic origin.
Materials and Methods This retrospective population-based cohort study with 30-day follow-up includes data from the national HEMS database on patients with traumatic cardiac arrest between 2014 and 2022. Patients will be included if the HEMS physician clinically assessed them and diagnosed them with OHCA from traumatic origin. Hence, patients declared dead on scene by the HEMS will be included. The traumatic aetiology will be supported by secondary diagnoses and free text descriptions from the HEMS database. Trigger words are developed using consecutive text search algorithms in a predefined subgroup of all OHCAs in the Danish Cardiac Arrest Registry note fields. The text search algorithm has been manually validated until no further relevant cases came up.
Data acquisition The HEMS file data were linked to the Danish Civil Registration System and, finally, to the prehospital patient record through the personal civil identification number. The HEMS file database was established in October 2014 and comprises information on all HEMS dispatches in Denmark.[12] Variables included
Participants This study includes all patients with TCA in Denmark between 2016 and 2021 who were treated by the Danish HEMS. All age groups are included. Patients will be included if they suffered from an OHCA from traumatic origin and were assessed by the Danish HEMS. The latter will be identified through manual validation based on a predefined search string among all OHCAs in Denmark (derived from the Danish Cardiac Arrest Registry) within the study period. TCA is defined as cardiac arrest resulting from blunt, penetrating or burn injury, according to the Utstein template.[11] Patients to whom the HEMS was dispatched but did not arrive will be excluded. Patients with cardiac arrest resulting from hanging, drowning, or electrocution will be excluded. Further, patients without a valid personal identification number and non-Danish citizens will be excluded.
Setting The Danish EMS is organised according to the five health regions of Denmark, with an emergency medical dispatch centre in each region. The ground EMS has been supplemented by the Danish Helicopter Emergency Medical Service (HEMS) on a national level since 2014. [14,15] The Danish HEMS is staffed by a consultant-level anaesthesiologist, a pilot and a specially trained paramedic (HEMS crew member).[12] The Danish HEMS is dispatched to time-dependent emergencies such as stroke, cardiac arrest, acute myocardial infarction or severe trauma.[12] The dispatch criteria for the Danish HEMS are described in detail elsewhere. [14,16] The HEMS initiates advanced prehospital interventions both on scene and during transportation; this includes assisted airway management, ultrasound examinations and procedures like thoracotomies and transfusion of blood products. Further, it assures fast transfer to specialised in-hospital care.[14]
Analyses Data will be collected and reported using the STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) statement. [17] All data on the personal civil identification number level will be pseudonymised. Descriptive statistics will be reported as absolute numbers and percentages or medians and interquartile ranges. Comparative analyses will be carried out using non-parametric testing to examine subgroups. Normative continuous data will be evaluated with Student's t-test and categorical data with Fisher's exact test. Logistic regression analysis will be performed for multivariate analysis. Due to the low number of survivors, ROSC was chosen as the dependent variable within the adjusted analyses instead of 30-day survival as intended.
The independent association of ROSC will be described using multiple logistic regression with odds ratios (OR) and corresponding (95% CI). The analysis will be adjusted for age, sex, mechanism of injury, response time, initial rhythm and endotracheal intubation. A directed acyclic graph is provided to clarify the basis of the included variables. Statistical significance was considered at a p-value of <0.05, and all statistical tests will be performed using R version 4.1.3 (2022-03-10).
Outcomes The primary outcome is the identification and evaluation of 30-day survival in patients with TCA. The secondary outcomes are the assessment of prehospital ROSC in patients with TCA and status at admission to the hospital. Further, prehospital critical care was evaluated.
Ethical considerations The General Data Protection Regulation will be followed according to Danish legislation, and the study was registered and approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency (Reference: R-22019033 (RS)) and by the Regional Research Board (Reference: REG-031-2022). Since it is a registry-based study, Danish legislation does not require ethical committee approval or patient consent.
Publication The final results are targeted for publication in an international peer-reviewed journal. Participation as coauthors will be decided according to the Vancouver criteria or acknowledged for providing access to data.
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