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Outcomes and characteristics of cardiac arrest in children with pulmonary hypertension: A secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUS clinical trial.
- Morgan, Ryan;
- Reeder, Ron;
- Ahmed, Tageldin;
- Bell, Michael;
- Berger, John;
- Bishop, Robert;
- Bochkoris, Matthew;
- Burns, Candice;
- Carcillo, Joseph;
- Carpenter, Todd;
- Dean, J;
- Diddle, J;
- Federman, Myke;
- Fernandez, Richard;
- Fink, Ericka;
- Franzon, Deborah;
- Frazier, Aisha;
- Friess, Stuart;
- Graham, Kathryn;
- Hall, Mark;
- Hehir, David;
- Himebauch, Adam;
- Horvat, Christopher;
- Huard, Leanna;
- Maa, Tensing;
- Manga, Arushi;
- McQuillen, Patrick;
- Meert, Kathleen;
- Mourani, Peter;
- Nadkarni, Vinay;
- Naim, Maryam;
- Notterman, Daniel;
- Page, Kent;
- Pollack, Murray;
- Sapru, Anil;
- Schneiter, Carleen;
- Sharron, Matthew;
- Srivastava, Neeraj;
- Tabbutt, Sarah;
- Tilford, Bradley;
- Viteri, Shirley;
- Wessel, David;
- Wolfe, Heather;
- Yates, Andrew;
- Zuppa, Athena;
- Berg, Robert;
- Sutton, Robert
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2023.109897Abstract
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have identified pulmonary hypertension (PH) as a relatively common diagnosis in children with in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA), and preclinical laboratory studies have found poor outcomes and low systemic blood pressures during CPR for PH-associated cardiac arrest. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of PH among children with IHCA and the association between PH diagnosis and intra-arrest physiology and survival outcomes. METHODS: This was a prospectively designed secondary analysis of patients enrolled in the ICU-RESUS clinical trial (NCT02837497). The primary exposure was a pre-arrest diagnosis of PH. The primary survival outcome was survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category score 1-3 or unchanged from baseline). The primary physiologic outcome was event-level average diastolic blood pressure (DBP) during CPR. RESULTS: Of 1276 patients with IHCAs during the study period, 1129 index IHCAs were enrolled; 184 (16.3%) had PH and 101/184 (54.9%) were receiving inhaled nitric oxide at the time of IHCA. Survival with favorable neurologic outcome was similar between patients with and without PH on univariate (48.9% vs. 54.4%; p = 0.17) and multivariate analyses (aOR 0.82 [95%CI: 0.56, 1.20]; p = 0.32). There were no significant differences in CPR event outcome or survival to hospital discharge. Average DBP, systolic BP, and end-tidal carbon dioxide during CPR were similar between groups. CONCLUSIONS: In this prospective study of pediatric IHCA, pre-existing PH was present in 16% of children. Pre-arrest PH diagnosis was not associated with statistically significant differences in survival outcomes or intra-arrest physiologic measures.
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