Factors Influencing Survival to Hospital Discharge in Children Following In-Hospital Cardiopulmonary Arrest

Aim: The incidence of pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) is between 2-6%. There is significant morbidity and mortality associated with these events which leads to tremendous burden on the hospital resources. It is necessary to fully analyze these events. This study aimed at evaluating the survival predictors after in-hospital pediatric cardiac arrest. Methods : Patients aged <18 years who received cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) for > 1 min during their hospital stay between June 1, 2015, and May 31, 2020, were included. We examined the pre arrest, intra arrest


Introduction
In the United States, approximately 15,200 children experience in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) each year [1].There has been a substantial improvement in pediatric IHCA, with a current survival of 28 -30% [2].This improvement in survival over the past 18 years is in part due to the improved quality of resuscitation practices, such as high-quality chest compressions with minimal interruptions, use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation during resuscitation, and post-resuscitation care [1].A detailed analysis of peri-arrest management is necessary, as it is associated with high mortality and morbidity and places a heavy burden on hospitals [3].IHCA occurs more frequently in intensive care units despite being highly monitored because of the severity of illness.It is likely that advanced hemodynamic monitoring devices were already in place at the time of the arrest.
Intensivists can adjust their resuscitation efforts during the intra-arrest period based on the patient's underlying physiological data, such as diastolic blood pressure and end-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO 2 ) [4][5][6].There is little guidance [7][8][9] in terms of the utilization of these tools during resuscitation.
This study aimed to identify factors associated with survival to hospital discharge after an in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA), including pre-arrest, intra-arrest, and post-arrest factors.

Design and Setting
Following Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval (Study ID 21-062), this retrospective single-center study identified pediatric patients with cardiopulmonary arrest at the Cleveland Clinic Children's (Cleveland, OH) Pediatric Cardiac Resuscitation Review Committee records.We included patients (age 0 -18 years) who received cardiopulmonary resuscitation for > 1 min (defined as requiring manual CPR and/or defibrillation) between June 1, 2015, and May 31, 2020, at our institution.Newborn resuscitation in the delivery room, patients with "do not attempt resuscitation" orders, and those with out-of-hospital resuscitation performed during transport by the emergency medical service or in the emergency room were excluded.

Data Collection
All data were collected from patients' electronic medical records and entered into the Cleveland Clinic's Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap®).Pre-arrest characteristics included patient demographics, comorbid conditions present prior to resuscitation, admission diagnosis, presence of invasive lines or endotracheal tubes prior to cardiac arrest, and location of cardiac arrest.Intra-arrest details included inciting event to cardiac arrest, duration of CPR, number of defibrillation attempts, utilization of Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) in the resuscitation event, and hemodynamic parameters including systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, mean arterial blood pressure, oxygen saturation, medications, blood products and fluid administered during resuscitation, placement of intravenous catheters, intraosseous lines, invasive lines, intubation, and chest tube during resuscitation.Post-resuscitative care details included the use of therapeutic hypothermia, treatment of status epilepticus, fluid balance for 48 hours, duration of ECMO, and utilization of continuous renal replacement therapy.

Definitions
Initial arrest rhythm was categorized as bradycardia, pulseless electrical activity (PEA), ventricular tachycardia/ fibrillation (VF/VT), asystole, or unknown.Medications administered included epinephrine dose per 5 min of cardiac arrest time, sodium bicarbonate dose per 5 min of cardiac arrest time, and calcium gluconate dose per 5 min of cardiac arrest time.The location of arrest was categorized as pediatric ICU, Floor, neonatal ICU, and Operation theater.Inciting events such as hypoxia due to lung disease and hypoxia due to airway issues categorized as respiratory-induced cardiac arrest, bradycardia, and hypotension were categorized as cardiac-induced cardiac arrest.

Statistical analysis
Clinical characteristics were described using medians with 25th and 75th percentiles for continuous variables, and absolute counts with percentages for categorical variables.Univariate associations between these characteristics and the outcomes were examined using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test for continuous or ordinal characteristics and Pearson's chi-square test or Fisher's exact test for categorical characteristics, as appropriate.Factors with low prevalence (< 5%) were excluded.Logistic regression models were used to estimate the odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals.For these models, the clinical characteristics that had Volume 8; Issue 3 Arch Pediatr, an open access journal ISSN: 2575-825X a univariate p-value <0.1 were entered into the model using a backward selection approach, and only those with a p < 0.05 were retained in the final model.All tests were two-tailed and were performed at an overall significance level of 0.05.SAS software (version 9.4; SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA) was used for all analyses and plots.

Discussion
This retrospective study reports the association of pre-arrest, intra-arrest, and post-arrest factors with survival after IHCA.Prearrest survival factors were age < 1-year, female sex, absence of a premorbid condition associated with hematology and oncology, or cyanotic congenital heart disease.These factors are typically patient-specific and non-modifiable and are important associations that could guide clinicians in determining the expected prognosis and risk stratification.
In our study, a higher number of fluid boluses administered during intra-arrest event was associated with increased mortality.Fluids increase cardiac output during CPR by increasing coronary perfusion pressure [10,13].The coronary perfusion pressure is the difference between aortic diastolic pressure and right ventricular end diastolic pressures [18].It is only appropriate to administer intravenous fluid loading during CPR if therapy could increase aortic diastolic pressure rather than outflow pressure, such as right ventricular end-diastolic pressures [11,12].An increase in outflow pressure is detrimental to tissue perfusion, as it results in a decrease in coronary perfusion pressure.Fluids are generally administered during CPR.Fluid resuscitation strategies are highly variable, given that there is little evidence and guidance for fluid therapy during resuscitation [10].A thorough understanding of pre-arrest events would help determine an appropriate intravenous fluid strategy during resuscitation.It should be reserved only for patients with suspected or confirmed hypovolemia, hemorrhagic shock, or distributive shock.
A higher epinephrine dose administered during intra arrest event was associated with increased mortality in our study.Epinephrine increases coronary perfusion pressure, which increases the likelihood of the return of spontaneous circulation.Using further doses of epinephrine increases beta-adrenergic activity and oxygen demand, impairing myocardial function and causing ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation [16].Pediatric resuscitation has used epinephrine for over 50 years, but there is insufficient evidence on dosing intervals or efficacy [14].Hoyme et al [14], reports lesser doses of epinephrine and average intervals longer than 3-5 minutes were associated with improved survival to hospital discharge.Meert et al [15], noted higher dose of epinephrine was associated with mortality.
A longer CPR duration was associated with higher mortality rates in our study.Prolonged cardiac arrest results in a longer low-flow state, hypoperfusion, poor oxygen delivery, and tissue Volume 8; Issue 3 Arch Pediatr, an open access journal ISSN: 2575-825X hypoxia, resulting in multi-organ dysfunction.A CPR duration >14 min was associated with a 75% mortality rate.Of the patients, 22% had respiratory-induced cardiac arrest and 70% had cardiacinduced cardiac arrest.(SI table 1).Cardiac-induced cardiac arrest is associated with a higher mortality rate.Similar findings were noted in a study by Bernes et al [18].These differences, in part, may be related to the importance of CPR duration and its association with etiology.In contrast, Goldberg et al [17] reported patients at hospitals with longer attempts had a higher likelihood of ROSC and survival to discharge, particularly when the arrest was due to asystole and pulseless electrical activity.Matos et al [2] reported, CPR for >20 min is not futile in some patient illness categories, and CPR duration was independently associated with survival to hospital discharge.Despite the significant results of our study, we were unable to provide specific cut-off data for the termination of CPR.Some patients may require longer resuscitation than others do.Accurate identification of these patients is important to prevent the early termination of resuscitation in those who would otherwise have survived.

Limitations
This study had several limitations.This is constrained by the characteristics of retrospective chart reviews, data collection, and analysis.We considered that high-quality CPR was provided during the event with regard to compression quality and appropriate response time.There was limited statistical power owing to the small sample size.Perhaps a larger study would have provided different results regarding event survival, the association between hemodynamics and survival, or other characteristics during CPR.

Conclusions
A thorough understanding of peri-arrest factors would aid healthcare practitioners in predicting patient prognosis, making appropriate treatment decisions, improving resuscitation methods, and counseling families.Pre-arrest factors guide prognostication and risk stratification, as they are patient-specific and nonmodifiable.During the intra-arrest period, a deeper understanding of the patient's physiology, cardiopulmonary interactions, appropriate medication use, and fluid resuscitation can significantly increase survival.Future research endeavors should focus on the efficacy of medications during intra arrest period, fluid resuscitation guidelines, incorporating physiological parameters into the arrest algorithm, and providing patient-centric care.

Figure 1 :
Figure 1: Validity of CPR characteristics to distinguish survivors from non-survivors: ROC Analysis (the numbers in the legend were AUC and its 95% CI)

Table 3 :
Adjusted association between mortality before discharge and each of the following factors after adjusting for gender, cardiac history, arterial line presence and ECMO during CPR; CPR: cardiopulmonary resuscitation.