Assessment of emergency physicians' performance in identifying shockable rhythm in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: an observational simulation study.


Journal

Emergency medicine journal : EMJ
ISSN: 1472-0213
Titre abrégé: Emerg Med J
Pays: England
ID NLM: 100963089

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
May 2022
Historique:
received: 09 03 2021
accepted: 29 01 2022
pubmed: 18 2 2022
medline: 26 4 2022
entrez: 17 2 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Emergency physicians can use a manual or an automated defibrillator to provide defibrillation of patients who had out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Performance of emergency physicians in identifying shockable rhythm with a manual defibrillator has been poorly explored whereas that of automated defibrillators is well known (sensitivity 0.91-1.00, specificity 0.96-0.99). We conducted this study to estimate the sensitivity/specificity and speed of shock/no-shock decision-making by prehospital emergency physicians for shockable or non-shockable rhythm, and their preference for manual versus automated defibrillation. We developed a web application that simulates a manual defibrillator (https://simul-shock.firebaseapp.com/). In 2019, all (262) emergency physicians of six French emergency medical services were invited to participate in a study in which 60 ECG rhythms from real OHCA recordings were successively presented to the physicians for determination of whether they would or would not administer a shock. Time to decision was recorded. Answers were compared with a gold standard (concordant answers of three experts). We report sensitivity for shockable rhythms (decision to shock) and specificity for non-shockable rhythms (decision not to shock). Physicians were also asked whether they preferred manual or automated defibrillation. Among 215 respondents, we were able to analyse results for 190 physicians. 57% of emergency physicians preferred manual defibrillation. Median (IQR) sensitivity for a shock delivery for shockable rhythm was 0.91 (0.81-1.00); median specificity for no-shock delivery for non-shockable rhythms was 0.91 (0.80-0.96). More precisely, sensitivities for shock delivery for ventricular tachycardia (VT) and coarse ventricular fibrillation (VF) were both 1.0 (1.0-1.0); sensitivity for fine VF was 0.6 (0.2-1). Specificity for not shocking a pulseless electrical activity (PEA) was 0.83 (0.72-0.86), and for asystole, specificity was 0.93 (0.86-1). Median speed of decision-making (in seconds) were: VT 2.0 (1.6-2.7), coarse VF 2.1 (1.7-2.9), asystole 2.4 (1.8-3.5), PEA 2.8 (2.0-4.2) and fine VF 2.8 (2.1-4.3). Global sensitivity and specificity were comparable with published automated external defibrillator studies. Shockable rhythms with the best clinical prognoses (VT and coarse VF) were very rapidly recognised with very good sensitivity. The decision-making for fine VF or asystole and PEA was less accurate.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Emergency physicians can use a manual or an automated defibrillator to provide defibrillation of patients who had out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Performance of emergency physicians in identifying shockable rhythm with a manual defibrillator has been poorly explored whereas that of automated defibrillators is well known (sensitivity 0.91-1.00, specificity 0.96-0.99). We conducted this study to estimate the sensitivity/specificity and speed of shock/no-shock decision-making by prehospital emergency physicians for shockable or non-shockable rhythm, and their preference for manual versus automated defibrillation.
METHODS METHODS
We developed a web application that simulates a manual defibrillator (https://simul-shock.firebaseapp.com/). In 2019, all (262) emergency physicians of six French emergency medical services were invited to participate in a study in which 60 ECG rhythms from real OHCA recordings were successively presented to the physicians for determination of whether they would or would not administer a shock. Time to decision was recorded. Answers were compared with a gold standard (concordant answers of three experts). We report sensitivity for shockable rhythms (decision to shock) and specificity for non-shockable rhythms (decision not to shock). Physicians were also asked whether they preferred manual or automated defibrillation.
RESULTS RESULTS
Among 215 respondents, we were able to analyse results for 190 physicians. 57% of emergency physicians preferred manual defibrillation. Median (IQR) sensitivity for a shock delivery for shockable rhythm was 0.91 (0.81-1.00); median specificity for no-shock delivery for non-shockable rhythms was 0.91 (0.80-0.96). More precisely, sensitivities for shock delivery for ventricular tachycardia (VT) and coarse ventricular fibrillation (VF) were both 1.0 (1.0-1.0); sensitivity for fine VF was 0.6 (0.2-1). Specificity for not shocking a pulseless electrical activity (PEA) was 0.83 (0.72-0.86), and for asystole, specificity was 0.93 (0.86-1). Median speed of decision-making (in seconds) were: VT 2.0 (1.6-2.7), coarse VF 2.1 (1.7-2.9), asystole 2.4 (1.8-3.5), PEA 2.8 (2.0-4.2) and fine VF 2.8 (2.1-4.3).
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Global sensitivity and specificity were comparable with published automated external defibrillator studies. Shockable rhythms with the best clinical prognoses (VT and coarse VF) were very rapidly recognised with very good sensitivity. The decision-making for fine VF or asystole and PEA was less accurate.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35172979
pii: emermed-2021-211417
doi: 10.1136/emermed-2021-211417
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Observational Study

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

347-352

Investigateurs

Daniel Jost (D)
Frederic Lemoine (F)
Vincent Lanoe (V)
Benoit Frattini (B)
Eric Gauyat (E)
Sabine Lemoine (S)
Frederic Briche (F)
Xavier Lesaffre (X)
Laure Alhanati (L)
Jean-Paul Freiermuth (JP)
Romain Kedzierewicz (R)
Albane Miron De L'espinay (AM)
Ludovic Delhaye (L)
Olga Maurin (O)
Clément Derkenne (C)
Romain Jouffroy (R)
Laurent Prieux (L)
Olivier Yavari (O)
Vivien Hong (V)
Olivier Stibbe (O)
Stéphane Travers (S)
Bertrand Prunet (B)

Commentaires et corrections

Type : CommentIn

Informations de copyright

© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Competing interests: None declared.

Auteurs

Clément Derkenne (C)

Paris Fire Brigade, Paris, France clement.derkenne@gmail.com.

Daniel Jost (D)

Paris Fire Brigade, Paris, France.

Florian Roquet (F)

Anesthesia and Critical Care Department, Hôpital européen Georges-Pompidou, Paris, France.

Pascal Corpet (P)

Bayes Impact, Paris, France.

Benoit Frattini (B)

Paris Fire Brigade, Paris, France.

Romain Kedzierewicz (R)

Paris Fire Brigade, Paris, France.

Guillaume Bellec (G)

Marseille Naval Fire Battalion, Marseille, France.

Benjamin Rajon (B)

Emergency Department, CHU de La Réunion Sites Sud Saint-Pierre, Saint-Pierre, Réunion.

Marianne Fernandez (M)

Service d'Aide Médicale d'Urgence, Gap, France.

Thomas Loeb (T)

Service d'Aide Médicale d'Urgence, Garches, France.

Emmanuel Pierantoni (E)

Emergency Department, Hopital de Saint-Jean de Maurienne, Saint Jean de Maurienne, France.

Antoine Lamblin (A)

Hopital d'Instruction des Armees Percy, Clamart, France.

Bertrand Prunet (B)

Paris Fire Brigade, Paris, France.
Ecole du Val-de-Grace, Paris, France.

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