Predicting the Presence of an Acute Coronary Lesion Among Patients Resuscitated From Cardiac Arrest.

Waldo SW, Chang L, Strom JB, O’Brien C, Pomerantsev E, Yeh RW. Predicting the Presence of an Acute Coronary Lesion Among Patients Resuscitated From Cardiac Arrest.. Circulation. Cardiovascular interventions. 2015;8(10).

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A mechanism to stratify patients resuscitated from a cardiac arrest according to the likelihood of an acute coronary lesion would have significant utility. We thus sought to develop and validate a risk prediction model for the presence of an acute coronary lesion among patients resuscitated from an arrest.

METHODS AND RESULTS: All subjects undergoing coronary angiography after resuscitation from a cardiac arrest were identified in an ongoing institutional registry from 2009 to 2014. Backwards stepwise selection of candidate covariates was used to create a logistic regression model for the presence of an angiographic culprit lesion and internally validated with bootstrapping. A clinical point score was generated and its prognostic abilities compared with contemporary measures. Among 247 subjects undergoing coronary angiography after resuscitation from a cardiac arrest, 130 (52%) had an acute lesion in a coronary artery. A multivariable model-including angina, congestive heart failure symptoms, shockable arrest rhythm (ventricular fibrillation/ventricular tachycardia), and ST-elevations-had excellent discrimination (optimism corrected C-Statistic, 0.88) and calibration (Hosmer-Lemeshow P=0.540) for an acute coronary lesion. Compared with electrocardiographic findings alone, a point score based on this model more accurately predicted the presence of an acute lesion among patients resuscitated from a cardiac arrest (integrated discrimination improvement, 0.10; 95% confidence interval, 0.04-0.19; P<0.001).

CONCLUSIONS: Patients with a cardiac arrest can be risk stratified for the presence of an acute coronary lesion using 4 easily measured variables. This simple risk score may be used to improve patient selection for emergent coronary angiography among resuscitated patients.

Last updated on 03/18/2024
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