Temporal trends, predictors and outcomes of inpatient palliative care use in cardiac arrest complicating acute myocardial infarction

Article indépendant

KANWAR, Ardaas | HARSHA PATLOLLA, Sri | SINGH, Mandeep | MURPHREE, Dennis H. | SUNDARAGIRI, Pranathi R. | JABER, Wissam A. | NICHOLSON, William J. | VALLABHAJOSYULA, Saraschandra

BACKGROUND: Utilization of inpatient palliative care services (PCS) has been infrequently studied in patients with cardiac arrest complicating acute myocardial infarction (AMI-CA). METHODS: Adult AMI-CA admissions were identified from the National Inpatient Sample (2000-2017). Outcomes of interest included temporal trends and predictors of PCS use and in-hospital mortality, length of stay, hospitalization costs and discharge disposition in AMI-CA admissions with and without PCS use. Multivariable logistic regression and propensity matching were used to adjust for confounding. RESULTS: Among 584,263 AMI-CA admissions, 26,919 (4.6%) received inpatient PCS. From 2000 to 2017 PCS use increased from <1% to 11.5%. AMI-CA admissions that received PCS were on average older, had greater comorbidity, higher rates of cardiogenic shock, acute organ failure, lower rates of coronary angiography (48.6% vs 63.3%), percutaneous coronary intervention (37.4% vs 46.9%), and coronary artery bypass grafting (all p<0.001). Older age, greater comorbidity burden and acute non-cardiac organ failure were predictive of PCS use. In-hospital mortality was significantly higher in the PCS cohort (multivariable logistic regression: 84.6% vs 42.9%, adjusted odds ratio 3.62 [95% CI 3.48-3.76]; propensity-matched analysis: 84.7% vs. 66.2%, p<0.001). The PCS cohort received a do- not-resuscitate status more often (47.6% vs. 3.7%), had shorter hospital stays (4 vs 5 days), and were discharged more frequently to skilled nursing facilities (73.6% vs. 20.4%); all p<0.001. These results were consistent in the propensity-matched analysis. CONCLUSIONS: Despite an increase in PCS use in AMI-CA, it remains significantly underutilized highlighting the role for further integrating of these specialists in AMI-CA care.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2021.10.044

Voir la revue «Resuscitation, 170»

Autres numéros de la revue «Resuscitation»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Temporal trends, predictors and outcomes of i...

Article | KANWAR, Ardaas | Resuscitation | vol.170

BACKGROUND: Utilization of inpatient palliative care services (PCS) has been infrequently studied in patients with cardiac arrest complicating acute myocardial infarction (AMI-CA). METHODS: Adult AMI-CA admissions were identified ...

Temporal trends, predictors and outcomes of i...

Article indépendant | KANWAR, Ardaas | Resuscitation | vol.170

BACKGROUND: Utilization of inpatient palliative care services (PCS) has been infrequently studied in patients with cardiac arrest complicating acute myocardial infarction (AMI-CA). METHODS: Adult AMI-CA admissions were identified ...

Improving the delivery of palliative care thr...

Article | MURPHREE, Dennis H. | Journal of the American medical informatics association

OBJECTIVE: Access to palliative care (PC) is important for many patients with uncontrolled symptom burden from serious or complex illness. However, many patients who could benefit from PC do not receive it early enough or at all. ...

De la même série

Temporal trends, predictors and outcomes of i...

Article indépendant | KANWAR, Ardaas | Resuscitation | vol.170

BACKGROUND: Utilization of inpatient palliative care services (PCS) has been infrequently studied in patients with cardiac arrest complicating acute myocardial infarction (AMI-CA). METHODS: Adult AMI-CA admissions were identified ...

European Resuscitation Council guidelines 202...

Article indépendant | MADAR, John | Resuscitation | vol.161

The European Resuscitation Council has produced these newborn life support guidelines, which are based on the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) 2020 Consensus on Science and Treatment Recommendations (CoSTR)...

European Resuscitation Council guidelines 202...

Article indépendant | MENTZELOPOULOS, Spyros D. | Resuscitation | vol.161

These European Resuscitation Council Ethics guidelines provide evidence-based recommendations for the ethical, routine practice of resuscitation and end-of-life care of adults and children. The guideline primarily focus on major e...

Palliative care utilization following out-of-...

Article indépendant | ALBAENI, Aiham | Resuscitation | vol.124

AIMS: Palliative care (PC) has become an integral component of comprehensive care provided to critically ill patients. Little is known about the utilization of palliative care following Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest (OHCA) in the...

Prevalence of advance directives and impact o...

Article indépendant | REUTER, Paul-Georges | Resuscitation | vol.116

AIM: To evaluate the prevalence of advance directives and their impact on the management of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) victims. METHODS: the authors analyzed data extracted from the French national registry of adult OHC...

Chargement des enrichissements...