Uncontrolled donation programs after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. An estimation of potential donors.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2017-11-26

Authors

Navalpotro-Pascual, Jose Maria
Echarri-Sucunza, Alfredo
Mateos-Rodríguez, Alonso
Peinado-Vallejo, Francisco
Del Valle, Patricia Fernández
Alonso-Moreno, Daniel
Del Pozo-Pérez, Carmen
Mier-Ruiz, María V
Ruiz-Azpiazu, Jose Ignacio
Bravo-Castello, José

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

To determine the number of potential deceased organ donors from out-of- hospital cardiac arrest cases (OHCA) attended by public physician-led emergency medical services in Spain, based on data recorded in the nationwide Spanish OHCA Registry (OHSCAR). We analysed OHSCAR data on deceased OHCA patients in Spain during 13 months (1/10/2013 to 31/10/2014). Variables included age, sex, estimated OHCA time, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) start time and outcome. Inclusion criteria were: age 16-60 years, witnessed OHCA, no return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and time interval Of a total 8789 cases, 3290 met the age criteria; of these, CPR was not witnessed in 745 cases. Among the remaining 2545 patients, 141 were included in uncontrolled donation after cardiac death (uDCD) programs, 902 arrived at the hospital with ROSC, 64 arrived with ongoing CPR and 15 cases were lost to follow-up. Of the remaining 1423 without ROSC, CPR initiation time was not recorded in 454 cases and 398 did not meet the time criteria Many potential donors are missed in current clinical practice. uDCD programs are few and underused even in a country with high rates of organ transplantation.

Description

MeSH Terms

Blood Circulation
Brain Death
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Emergency Medical Services
Female
Humans
Male
Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest
Retrospective Studies
Spain
Time-to-Treatment
Tissue Donors
Tissue and Organ Procurement

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

Emergency medical services, Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, Physician on board, Uncontrolled donation after cardiac death

Citation