Abstract 247: Assessing Feasibility of Proposed Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Programs in Scotland via Geospatial Modelling
K.H. Benjamin Leung, Louise Hartley, Stuart Gillon, Lyle Moncur, Timothy Chan, Steven Short, Gareth Clegg- Physiology (medical)
- Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Introduction: Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) may improve outcomes for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) where return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) is not achieved. We estimated the number of patients who may benefit from proposed in-hospital or pre-hospital ECPR programs in Scotland.
Methods: EMS-treated atraumatic OHCAs occurring in Scotland between Apr. 2017-Mar. 2022 were included. We identified those likely to benefit (age 16-70, initial rhythm VF/pVT, no ROSC) and those possibly likely to benefit (age 16-70, initial rhythm PEA, no ROSC) from ECPR. To achieve timely ECPR initiation within 60 mins, we computed the number of eligible OHCAs within 15 mins’ drive time surrounding each of the 3 ECPR-capable hospitals, 6 percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)-capable hospitals, and 28 adult emergency departments (ED) for in-hospital ECPR programs. We then computed the number of eligible OHCAs within a 45-minute drive time surrounding each of the 28 EDs and 140 ambulance stations and determined locations allowing one dedicated pre-hospital ECPR service to reach the greatest number of eligible OHCAs. We accounted for service availability based on 8 and 16-hour availability on weekdays and 24/7 availability.
Results: Of the 8,962 OHCAs included, 1,108 (12.3%) were classified likely to benefit, 4,675 (52.2%) possibly likely to benefit, and 3,179 (35.5%) unlikely to benefit from ECPR. In-hospital ECPR scenarios covered up to 12.5% of eligible OHCAs at ECPR-capable hospitals, 20.9% at PCI-capable hospitals, and 64.6% at all EDs. Pre-hospital ECPR scenarios with one crew covered up to 51.0% and 54.1% when based at an ED or ambulance station respectively, which were higher than respective in-hospital scenarios at ECPR-capable or PCI-capable hospitals, and were generally comparable to ECPR availability at all 28 EDs.
Conclusion: A pre-hospital ECPR service can generally reach greater numbers of OHCAs compared to in-hospital ECPR programs.