"Cardiac arrests remain a significant public health need worldwide, and the limited progress in improving poor survival in the U.S. and globally may be due to inadequate research," said leading researcher Shashank S. Sinha, M.D., M.Sc., from the University of Michigan. "We need to move the needle."
With just a few more than 64 thousand patients involved in high-standard cardiac arrest clinical trials in the past two decades, most of the best cardiac arrest research studies were conducted outside of the United States. That is less than five studies per year across the globe with published results, and researchers estimate that there are 25 to 86 times as many clinical trials published for heart failure, heart attack, and stroke.
"What we found in a nutshell was a striking paucity of randomized clinical trials relative to the burden of cardiac arrest in this country," said Sinha. "We estimate that only 2.5 such trials have been done for every 10,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests, and the number is even lower for in-hospital cardiac arrests." More than 535,000 cases of cardiac arrest occur each year in the United States, and only ten percent of people survive.
In addition to the disturbingly low number of studies done, the researchers saw that of those conducted, most tested drugs and devices rather than ways to improve the protocol surrounding cardiac arrest care by non-medical bystanders, EMTs, and hospital personnel. Overall, Sinha and his team found that cardiac arrest research lacked several key study avenues:
- Protocols for emergency care, post-arrest care, and studies of long-term survival and functional outcomes
- Records of patients following study; many trials did not follow patients long enough, and the researchers did not keep a record of what happened to survivors after they were discharged from the hospital or even after they saw the return of a normal heart rhythm after cardiac arrest
- Measuring outcomes of care like when patients return to work and what their quality of life is like
Sinha’s study was recently published in the journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes.
Source: University of Michigan Health System