• Am J Emerg Med · Oct 2017

    Observational Study

    Long-term survival of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients with malignancy.

    • Saee Byel Kang, Kyung Su Kim, Gil Joon Suh, Woon Yong Kwon, Kyoung Min You, Min Ji Park, Jung-In Ko, and Taegyun Kim.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, South Korea.
    • Am J Emerg Med. 2017 Oct 1; 35 (10): 1457-1461.

    BackgroundThe aim of this study was to investigate whether the 1-year survival rate of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) patients with malignancy was different from that of those without malignancy.MethodsAll adult OHCA patients were retrospectively analyzed in a single institution for 6years. The primary outcome was 1-year survival, and secondary outcomes were sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), survival to hospital admission, survival to discharge and discharge with a good neurological outcome (CPC 1 or 2). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and Cox proportional hazard regression analysis were performed to test the effect of malignancy.ResultsAmong 341 OHCA patients, 59 patients had malignancy (17.3%). Sustained ROSC, survival to admission, survival to discharge and discharge with a good CPC were not different between the two groups. The 1-year survival rate was lower in patients with malignancy (1.7% vs 11.4%; P=0.026). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis revealed that patients with malignancy had a significantly lower 1-year survival rate when including all patients (n=341; P=0.028), patients with survival to admission (n=172, P=0.002), patients with discharge CPC 1 or 2 (n=18, P=0.010) and patients with discharge CPC 3 or 4 (n=57, P=0.008). Malignancy was an independent risk factor for 1-year mortality in the Cox proportional hazard regression analysis performed in patients with survival to admission and survival to discharge.ConclusionsAlthough survival to admission, survival to discharge and discharge with a good CPC rate were not different, the 1-year survival rate was significantly lower in OHCA patients with malignancy than in those without malignancy.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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