Archive | 2021
Dispatcher-assisted, compression-only bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation does not improve the outcomes of unwitnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: An observational study with component analysis of rescue breath combination and dispatcher-assisted instruction
Abstract
\n Objectives: This study aimed to analyse the effects of rescue breath and chest compression combinations in bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (BCPR) with and without dispatch-assisted CPR (DA) on the outcomes between unwitnessed and bystander-witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA).Design and Settings: This retrospective study analysed the prospectively collected data of 212,003 unwitnessed and 117,920 bystander-witnessed OHCA cases between 2014 and 2016 in Japan, with BCPR classification based on two clinical components (DA provision [with or without DA] and combination of breaths and compressions [standard or compression-only]).Main outcome measures: Neurologically favourable outcome at 1 monthResults: In univariate analysis, unwitnessed cases had no significant association of BCPR with the overall neurologically favourable outcome (provided vs not provided, 0.65% [686/106,152] vs 0.66% [694/105,851]) compared with bystander-witnessed cases (5.6% [3,538/62,814] vs 3.5% [1,911/55,106]). After BCPR classification by two clinical components, the outcome of unwitnessed cases was improved by standard BCPR with DA (0.88% [69/7,807], adjusted OR; 95% CI, 1.38; 1.05–1.81) and compression-only (1.04% [161/15,497], 1.49;1.23–1.80) and standard (1.18% [41/3,463], 1.71; 1.21–2.43) BCPR without DA, but not by compression-only BCPR with DA (0.52% [415/79,385], 0.88; 0.76–1.01). According to multivariable logistic regression analysis focusing on the two clinical components only in cases with BCPR, neurologically favourable outcomes were worse in DA provision (0.76; 0.60–0.97) but better in standard BCPR, (1.27; 1.01–1.60) without significant interaction (P = 0.16), in unwitnessed cases. In bystander-witnessed cases, DA provision was associated with better outcomes (1.27; 1.01–1.60), with significant interaction (P = 0.03).Conclusions: Compared with no BCPR, compression-only BCPR with DA does not improve the neurologically favourable outcomes, and standard BCPR without DA is ideal in unwitnessed OHCA cases. Education on standard CPR and chest compression-only CPR as an option should be maintained because numerous OHCA cases are not witnessed by bystanders.