- Topjian, Alexis A;
- Telford, Russell;
- Holubkov, Richard;
- Nadkarni, Vinay M;
- Berg, Robert A;
- Dean, J Michael;
- Moler, Frank W;
- Investigators, for the Therapeutic Hypothermia after Pediatric Cardiac Arrest Trial;
- Moler, Frank W;
- Meert, Kathleen L;
- Hutchinson, Jamie S;
- Newth, Christopher JL;
- Bennett, Kimberly S;
- Berger, John T;
- Topjian, Alexis A;
- Pineda, Jose A;
- Koch, Joshua D;
- Schleien, Charles L;
- Dalton, Heidi J;
- Ofori-Amanfo, George;
- Goodman, Denise M;
- Fink, Ericka L;
- McQuillen, Patrick;
- Zimmerman, Jerry J;
- Thomas, Neal J;
- van der Jagt, Elise W;
- Porter, Melissa B;
- Meyer, Michael T;
- Harrison, Rick;
- Pham, Nga;
- Schwarz, Adam J;
- Nowak, Jeffrey E;
- Alten, Jeffrey;
- Wheeler, Derek S;
- Bhalala, Utpal S;
- Lidsky, Karen;
- Lloyd, Eric;
- Mathur, Mudit;
- Shah, Samir;
- Theodore, Wu;
- Theodorou, Andreas A;
- Sanders, Ronald C;
- Silverstein, Faye S;
- Christensen, James R;
- Slomine, Beth S;
- Pemberton, Victoria L;
- Browning, Brittan;
- Holubkov, Richard;
- Dean, J Michael
Aim
Approximately 40% of children who have an in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) in the US survive to discharge. We aimed to evaluate the impact of post-cardiac arrest hypotension during targeted temperature management following IHCA on survival to discharge.Methods
This is a secondary analysis of the therapeutic hypothermia after pediatric cardiac arrest in-hospital (THAPCA-IH) trial. "Early hypotension" was defined as a systolic blood pressure less than the fifth percentile for age and sex for patients not treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) or a mean arterial pressure less than fifth percentile for age and sex for patients treated with ECMO during the first 6 h of temperature intervention. The primary outcome was survival to hospital discharge.Results
Of 299 children, 142 (47%) patients did not receive ECMO and 157 (53%) received ECMO. Forty-two of 142 (29.6%) non-ECMO patients had systolic hypotension. Twenty-three of 157 (14.7%) ECMO patients had mean arterial hypotension. After controlling for confounders of interest, non-ECMO patients who had early systolic hypotension were less likely to survive to hospital discharge (40.5% vs. 72%; adjusted OR [aOR] 0.34; 95%CI, 0.12-0.93). There was no difference in survival to discharge by blood pressure groups for children treated with ECMO (30.4% vs. 49.3%; aOR = 0.60; 95%CI, 0.22-1.63).Conclusions
In this secondary analysis of the THAPCA-IH trial, in patients not treated with ECMO, systolic hypotension within 6 h of temperature intervention was associated with lower odds of discharge survival. Blood pressure groups in patients treated with ECMO were not associated with survival to discharge.