Abstract 207: The Association of Academia With Neurological Outcome Among Out-Of-Cardiac Arrest Patients Who Undergo Extracorporeal Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation
Background: Our study aim was to identify the association of acidemia with neurological outcome among the out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients who undergo extracorporeal cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (E-CPR). Method: We analyzed the data from multi-institutional prospective cohort study (CRITICAL study: Comprehensive Registry of Intensive Cares for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest Survival) including 14 emergency departments in Osaka, Japan. We included adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients aged ≥18 years who undergo E-CPR. The exposure of interest was serum pH measured before start to E-CPR on admission, and it was divided to tertiles. The primary outcome was 30-days favorable neurological outcome defined as cerebral performance category 1 or 2. We calculated the adjusted odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) using logistic regression model, adjusted by age, sex, witness of collapse, by-stander CPR, cardiac rhythm on hospital arrival, and time to hospital arrival. Results: Among 9,822 patients in Critical study database, 303 patients were included in the analysis. The median (interquartile range) of the age was 62 (48-71) years-old. The range of serum pH in each tertile was as below; Tertile 1[ pH≥7.02, (n=101)], Tertile 2 [pH 6.87-7.02, (n=100)], Tertile 3 [pH <6.87, (n=102)]. The adjusted OR with 95%CI of tertile2, and 3 for favorable neurological outcome were 0.23 (0.09 to 0.58), and 0.18 (0.06 to 0.52) referred to Tertile 1, respectively. Conclusion: Among the out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients who undergo E-CPR, severe acidemia (pH < 7.02) on arrival was associated with 30-days poor neurological outcome. Serum pH measurement might be useful to consider the indication of E-CPR.