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In cardiac arrest, older patients, probability of survival, comprehensive geriatric assessment, frailty status The Use of
Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS, rockwood score) > 4
As Prognostic Item
Is better Than
no frailty assessment
To predict probability of survival following resuscitation for cardiopulmonary arrest: no frail patient (CFS > 4) survived VS 26% of the non-frail (CFS ≤ 4) survived.
Age Ageing. 2020 Jun 5:afaa104. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afaa104. Epub ahead of print [Citation]
Ibitoye SE, Rawlinson S, Cavanagh A, Phillips V, Shipway DJH
Ibitoye SE, Rawlinson S, Cavanagh A, Phillips V, Shipway DJH
North Bristol NHS Trust, University College London, London, UK
Cohorts

Aim: To determine if frailty is associated with poor outcome following in-hospital cardiac arrest; to find if there is a "frailty threshold" beyond which cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) becomes futile.

Methods: Retrospective review of patients aged over 60 years who received CPR between May 2017 and December 2018, in a tertiary referral hospital, which does not provide primary coronary revascularisation. Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS) and Charlson Comorbidity Index were retrospectively assigned.

Results: Data for 90 patients were analysed, the median age was 77 (IQR 70-83); 71% were male; 44% were frail (CFS > 4). Frailty was predictive of in-hospital mortality independent of age, comorbidity and cardiac arrest rhythm (OR 2.789 95% CI 1.145-6.795). No frail patients (CFS > 4) survived to hospital discharge, regardless of cardiac arrest rhythm, whilst 13 (26%) of the non-frail (CFS ≤ 4) patients survived to hospital discharge. Of the 13 survivors (Age 72; range 61-86), 12 were alive at 1 year and had a good neurological outcome, the outcome for the remaining patient was unknown.

Conclusion: Frail patients are unlikely to survive to hospital discharge following in-hospital cardiac arrest, these results may facilitate clinical decision making regarding whether CPR may be considered futile. The Clinical Frailty Scale is a simple bedside assessment that can provide invaluable information when considering treatment escalation plans, as it becomes more widespread, larger scale observations using prospective assessments of frailty may become feasible.

Keywords: cardiac-arrest; cardiopulmonary resuscitation; frailty; older people; resuscitation.

© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Pubmed record:  PMID: 32500916
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