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Refractory Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Treated With Mechanical CPR, Hypothermia, ECMO and Early Reperfusion

Refractory Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Treated With Mechanical CPR, Hypothermia, ECMO and Early Reperfusion

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01186614
Acronym
CHEER
Enrollment
24
Registered
2010-08-23
Start date
2010-11-30
Completion date
2014-12-31
Last updated
2014-03-10

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Cardiac Arrest

Keywords

cardiac arrest, ECMO, hypothermia, automated CPR, coronary intervention

Brief summary

Sudden out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is a leading cause of death in Australia. The most common cause of OHCA is a heart attack. The current treatment of OHCA is resuscitation by ambulance paramedics involving CPR, electrical shocks to the heart, and injections of adrenaline. In more than 50% of cases, paramedics are unable to start the heart and the patient is declared dead at the scene. Patients with OHCA who do not respond to paramedic resuscitation are not routinely transported to hospital because it is hazardous for paramedics to undertake rapid transport whilst administering chest compressions and there is currently no additional therapy available at the hospital that would assist in starting the heart. However, a number of recent developments suggest that there may be a new approach to the resuscitation of this group of patients who would otherwise die. Firstly, Ambulance Victoria have recently introduced portable battery powered machines that allow chest compressions to be safely and effectively delivered during emergency ambulance transport. Second, The Alfred ICU will shortly be implementing a new protocol whereby the patient in cardiac arrest can immediately be placed on a heart-lung machine. This is known as extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Third, the brain can now be much better protected against damage due to lack of blood flow using therapeutic hypothermia which is the controlled lowering of body temperature from 37°C to 33°C. Clinical trials have demonstrated that this significantly decreases brain damage after OHCA. Finally, The Alfred Cardiology service has an emergency service for reopening the blocked artery of the heart in patients who present with a sudden blockage of the heart arteries. This is currently not used in patients without a heart beat because of the technical difficulty of undertaking this procedure with chest compressions being undertaken. This study proposes for the first time to implement all the above interventions when patients have failed standard resuscitation after OHCA. When standard resuscitation has proved futile, the patient will be transported to The Alfred with the mechanical chest compression device, cooled to 33°C, placed on ECMO, and then transported to the interventional cardiac catheter laboratory. The patient will then receive therapeutic hypothermia for 24 hours. Subsequent management will follow the standard treatment guidelines of The Alfred Intensive Care Unit.

Interventions

DEVICEAutomated CPR

Automated CPR utilised by paramedics to facilitate CPR during transport to hospital

DEVICEECMO

Insertion of peripheral VA ECMO

PROCEDURECoronary angiography

Coronary angiography and intervention where necessary will be performed following ECMO insertion

Paramedic initiated hypothermia with intravenous ice cold fluid and then continued for 24 hours (33 degrees)

Sponsors

The Alfred
CollaboratorOTHER
Ambulance Victoria
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
Bayside Health
Lead SponsorOTHER_GOV

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 59 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Adults 18-59 years * Out of hospital cardiac arrest due to presumed cardiac caus * Chest compressions are commenced within 10 minutes by bystanders or emergency medical services * Initial cardiac arrest rhythm of ventricular fibrillation * Remains in cardiac arrest at the scene at 20 minutes after standard paramedic advanced cardiac life support (intubation, intravenous adrenaline) * Autopulse machine is available * Within 10 minutes ambulance transport time to The Alfred * During normal working hours (9am-5pm, Monday to Friday) * ECMO commences within 60 minutes of the initial collapse

Exclusion criteria

* Presumed non-cardiac cause of cardiac arrest such as trauma, hanging, drowning, intracranial bleeding * Any pre-existing significant neurological disability * Significant non-cardiac co-morbidities that cause limitations in activities of daily living such as COPD, cirrhosis of the liver, renal failure on dialysis, terminal illness due to malignancy

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Survival to hospital dischargeAt hospital discharge

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Neurologic recoveryAt dischargeAssessed by cerebral performance category
Time until ECMO insertionOn admission
neurologic biomarkersDay 3neuron-specific enolase and S100β
Cardiac recoveryDays 1, 3, 5measured by echocardiography and cardiac biomakers including troponin, CK and BNP

Countries

Australia

Contacts

Primary ContactStephen A bernard, MBBS MD
s.bernard@alfred.org.au9076200
Backup ContactDion A Stub, MBBS
d.stub@alfred.org.au90762000

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026