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Effect of real-time feedback during cardiopulmonary resuscitation outside hospital: prospective, cluster-randomised trial

BMJ 2011; 342 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.d512 (Published 04 February 2011) Cite this as: BMJ 2011;342:d512
  1. David Hostler, research associate professor of emergency medicine1,
  2. Siobhan Everson-Stewart, research scientist2,
  3. Thomas D Rea, associate professor of medicine3,
  4. Ian G Stiell, professor and chair of emergency medicine4,
  5. Clifton W Callaway, associate professor and vice-chair of emergency medicine 1,
  6. Peter J Kudenchuk, professor of medicine3,
  7. Gena K Sears, resuscitation outcomes consortium programme manager 2,
  8. Scott S Emerson, professor of biostatistics2,
  9. Graham Nichol, professor of medicine235
  10. and the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium Investigators
  1. 1University of Pittsburgh, Department of Emergency Medicine, 3600 Forbes Ave, Suite 400A, Pittsburgh PA 15261, USA
  2. 2University of Washington Clinical Trial Center, Department of Biostatistics, Seattle WA, USA
  3. 3University of Washington, Department of Medicine, Seattle WA
  4. 4University of Ottawa, Department of Emergency Medicine, Ottawa ON, Canada
  5. 5University of Washington-Harborview Center for Prehospital Emergency Care, Seattle WA
  1. Correspondence to: D Hostler hostlerdp{at}upmc.edu
  • Accepted 2 November 2010

Abstract

Objective To investigate whether real-time audio and visual feedback during cardiopulmonary resuscitation outside hospital increases the proportion of subjects who achieved prehospital return of spontaneous circulation.

Design A cluster-randomised trial.

Subjects 1586 people having cardiac arrest outside hospital in whom resuscitation was attempted by emergency medical services (771 procedures without feedback, 815 with feedback).

Setting Emergency medical services from three sites within the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium in the United States and Canada.

Intervention Real-time audio and visual feedback on cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) provided by the monitor-defibrillator.

Main outcome measure Prehospital return of spontaneous circulation after CPR.

Results Baseline patient and emergency medical service characteristics did not differ between groups. Emergency medical services muted the audible feedback in 14% of cases during the period with feedback. Compared with CPR clusters lacking feedback, clusters assigned to feedback were associated with increased proportion of time in which chest compressions were provided (64% v 66%, cluster-adjusted difference 1.9 (95% CI 0.4 to 3.4)), increased compression depth (38 v 40 mm, adjusted difference 1.6 (0.5 to 2.7)), and decreased proportion of compressions with incomplete release (15% v 10%, adjusted difference −3.4 (−5.2 to −1.5)). However, frequency of prehospital return of spontaneous circulation did not differ according to feedback status (45% v 44%, adjusted difference 0.1% (−4.4% to 4.6%)), nor did the presence of a pulse at hospital arrival (32% v 32%, adjusted difference −0.8 (−4.9 to 3.4)), survival to discharge (12% v 11%, adjusted difference −1.5 (−3.9 to 0.9)), or awake at hospital discharge (10% v 10%, adjusted difference −0.2 (−2.5 to 2.1)).

Conclusions Real-time visual and audible feedback during CPR altered performance to more closely conform with guidelines. However, these changes in CPR performance were not associated with improvements in return of spontaneous circulation or other clinical outcomes.

Trial Registration Clinical Trials NCT00539539

Introduction

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is an essential link in the chain of survival for treating cardiac arrest. However, performance of cardiopulmonary resuscitation is highly variable both outside hospital and in hospital.1 2 Interruptions in chest compression, inadequate depth of chest compression, and high rates of ventilation adversely affect blood flow during chest compressions and can hinder resuscitation.3 4 Suboptimal CPR, particularly time spent without chest compressions (low chest compression fraction), can reduce survival of cardiac arrest patients.5

Current technology incorporated into a monitor-defibrillator can assess core components of CPR (rate and depth of compressions, extent of decompression, and timing of ventilations) through the use of an accelerometer and impedance changes across the defibrillation electrodes. This technology can also provide real-time audiovisual feedback so that the rescuer is prompted to perform according to guideline specifications. Use of such feedback increases the likelihood of performing CPR in accordance with guidelines during training and simulation.6 Providing real-time feedback enables more consistent CPR performance both in and outside hospital.7 8 Although real-time CPR feedback is a promising strategy to improve resuscitation care, little is known about the clinical effects of feedback during resuscitation. Prior studies have not been designed to rigorously assess the clinical outcome effects of real-time CPR feedback.

Three sites within the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium conducted a prospective cluster-randomised trial to assess the clinical effects of real-time CPR feedback during emergency medical services’ attempted resuscitation of prehospital cardiac arrest. We hypothesised that the feedback would increase the proportion of patients with return of spontaneous circulation compared with resuscitation without such feedback.

Methods

Design and setting

The Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium was formed from multiple sites in the United States and Canada to conduct controlled trials of prehospital treatment of cardiac arrest and life threatening trauma. This cluster-randomised controlled trial compared standard CPR with CPR with real-time feedback in selected emergency medical services participating in the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium. Data collection was accomplished in two US sites (King County Washington, Pittsburgh, and Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania) and one Canadian site (Thunder Bay, Ontario) through the existing infrastructure of Epistry-Cardiac Arrest. The Epistry-Cardiac Arrest is a prospective multicentre observational registry of cardiac arrests outside hospital that are attended by emergency medical services and receiving institutions that participate in the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium clinical research network.9 10 About half of the subjects in this trial were concomitantly enrolled in the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium PRIMED randomised clinical trial.11 12 The study was approved by the local institutional review or research ethics boards for each participating agency, with waiver of informed consent under minimal risk criteria. The first subject was enrolled on 1 February 2007, and enrolment ended on 9 March 2009 after reaching full enrolment.

Population

The study subjects were adults aged ≥20 years who had a cardiac arrest outside hospital and received rescue shocks or chest compressions by a participating emergency medical service with a monitor-defibrillator capable of real-time CPR feedback. Subjects were excluded if known to be prisoners or pregnant, if the cardiac arrest was due to traumatic causes, or if the subject had a “do not resuscitate” order.

Intervention and randomisation

CPR feedback was provided through proprietary Q-CPR software operating in the Philips MRx monitor-defibrillator (Philips Medical Systems, Andover MA, USA). The manufacturer provided participating emergency medical services with commercially available devices equipped with visual and audible real-time feedback on quality of CPR. The defibrillator includes a “puck” with force transducer and accelerometer that is placed on the patient’s sternum and connected to the monitor to measure the frequency, depth, and release of chest compressions. Ventilation is measured by means of changes in transthoracic impedance between the defibrillation electrodes or by capnography when this was used. Emergency medical service providers were trained in a manner consistent with local policy and standards, with the exception that the “puck” was to be used for data collection during resuscitation regardless of whether the CPR was randomised to provide feedback (“feedback-on”) or not (“feedback-off”).

The feedback feature of the defibrillator includes audible voice prompts and visual messages on the monitor screen that are triggered when measured chest compressions or ventilation deviate from guidelines or are interrupted. Providers can mute the voice prompts, but the visual prompts displayed on the monitor screen continue and an intermittent audible tone alerts the provider to the on-screen message. These feedback features can be activated or deactivated by an administrator password that was not available to the providers.

For this study, all the participating emergency medical agencies conducted a three month run-in period with the feedback feature turned off to establish familiarity with the use of the puck and with downloading data. After this period, a statistician in the coordinating centre randomised clusters ranging in size from individual emergency medical vehicles to groups of emergency medical agencies to feedback-on or feedback-off. Each cluster remained in its assigned mode for two to seven months, after which it switched to the opposite treatment arm. At the end of those two treatment periods, each cluster was again randomly assigned to feedback-on or feedback-off. This cycle continued for the duration of the study. Each cluster switched treatment arms at least once, and up to four times, during the study.

Data collection and definitions

Data were abstracted from the emergency medical services’ dispatch and patient care reports, hospital records, and the electronic defibrillator recordings. Standardised definitions and a uniform manual of operations were used to abstract patient characteristics (age, sex), circumstances of the cardiac arrest (witness status, arrest location, arrest before arrival of emergency medical service, presenting rhythm), prehospital care (bystander CPR, emergency medical service’s response intervals), and outcome at hospital discharge.9 Initial presenting rhythm was classified as ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia, pulseless electrical activity, or asystole based on review of the emergency medical service’s records and defibrillator electrocardiogram.

In some instances, the defibrillator was operated in automated external defibrillator mode, providing a shock or no shock, but the electrocardiogram was not available to classify the initial presenting rhythm. These cases, where a shock was delivered, were classified as ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia because of the high degree of specificity of the defibrillator for detecting shockable rhythms.13

Data about CPR performance were obtained from the electronic recordings downloaded from the defibrillators. This information was processed by the Philips Q-CPR software program, which displays a graphical and tabular summary of CPR processes to determine the minute-by-minute chest compression rate, chest compression fraction, ventilation rate, mean chest compression depth, and proportion of chest compressions with incomplete release. When CPR providers did not use the puck or if the accelerometer recording was unusable, we examined the transthoracic impedance channel recordings manually to calculate chest compression rate and fraction. Cases were checked by a study coordinator experienced in case review to assess if the automated measurements were accurate.

Outcome measures and sample size estimates

Restoration of spontaneous circulation before hospital admission was the primary study outcome and was defined as the presence of a palpable pulse in any vessel for any length of time during prehospital care. A pulse at hospital arrival was defined as the presence of a palpable pulse at the time of arrival to the emergency department.

Secondary outcomes included survival to hospital discharge, neurological status at discharge, and CPR variables. Survival to discharge was defined as discharge alive from hospital after the index arrest. Patients who were transferred to another acute care facility (for example, to undergo placement of an implantable cardioverter defibrillator) were considered to be still hospitalised. Patients transferred to a long term care facility or reclassified as a non-acute patient awaiting placement or chronic care were considered discharged. Neurological status at discharge was assessed by review of the medical records and was classified by degree of reported disability and discharge destination. A standardised instrument was used to categorise the neurological status of subjects at discharge according to disability.

This study of real-time feedback provided during prehospital CPR was designed with a power of 90% and a two sided alpha of 0.05 to detect a 10% absolute difference in return of spontaneous circulation between intervention and control arms, with an assumed 20% incidence of return of spontaneous circulation at any time during resuscitation.

Statistical analysis

Baseline demographic information was summarised by treatment group using frequency (percentage) for categorical variables. For continuous variables, we report the median (interquartile range) and mean (standard deviation).

The primary analysis was a weighted, paired t test of the rates of return of spontaneous circulation comparing periods of feedback-on versus feedback-off. Rates were paired by cluster; the cluster weights were proportional to the harmonic mean of the number of subjects treated within a cluster during the periods of feedback-on and feedback-off.14 Tables present the average within-cluster change, 95% confidence interval for the change, and the respective P value. This analysis was repeated on the secondary outcomes of return of spontaneous circulation at time of arrival at the emergency department and survival to hospital discharge. Analyses of secondary outcomes excluded cases with missing outcome information (the primary outcome, return of spontaneous circulation, was ascertained in all study subjects). Subgroups were defined a priori by presenting rhythm, sex, cause of the arrest, and location of the arrest (public or private). Outcomes analyses were repeated in each of these groups. Treatment group was based on the principle of intention to treat.

Measures of the CPR process were summarised by the mean (standard error) and median (interquartile range) on each treatment arm. The distribution of each CPR variable was estimated by kernel density estimation with a Gaussian kernel function and plotted by treatment arm. CPR variables were compared by randomisation status by fitting a linear regression model that included cluster as a fixed effect. The cluster adjusted difference, 95% confidence interval for the difference, and P value are presented. One participating agency randomised individual vehicles. For the analysis of CPR variables, all vehicles from this agency that did not treat at least five subjects during both the feedback-on and feedback-off periods were combined into a super-cluster.

To test for a carryover effect, we examined the treatment effect during the first two treatment periods. Limiting ourselves to those two periods, we calculated the difference in the rates of restoration of spontaneous circulation between the time when defibrillator feedback was off and the time it was on. We then classified clusters as those randomised to feedback-on in the first period or those first randomised to feedback-off. A weighted two sample t test comparing the treatment effect in the two types of clusters was performed as a test for carryover effect. If there was no carryover effect we would expect the average change in cluster rates of return of spontaneous circulation and survival to be similar in those clusters randomised to feedback-on first and those randomised to feedback-off first. This analysis was repeated for the rates of survival to hospital discharge.

Results

A total of 233 subjects, not included in the final analysis, were enrolled in the run-in phase of the study, during which the monitor-defibrillators were deployed in feedback-off mode, and the results are presented to show the baseline system and population characteristics. Subsequently 1586 consecutive subjects were enrolled (771 initially assigned to feedback-off and 815 to feedback-on) during the cluster-randomised evaluable period and provided the two primary comparison groups (fig 1). No study related adverse events were reported.

Figure1

Fig 1 Flow of subjects through the trial

Subject demographics, arrest circumstances, and emergency medical services’ response intervals did not differ between the groups. Overall, cardiac arrest occurred more commonly among men and in private locations, was witnessed by a bystander or emergency medical services about a third of the time, and most often presented with asystole (table 1).

Table 1

 Demographic and clinical characteristics of, and prehospital treatment received by, subjects with a cardiac arrest who received cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) outside hospital: 233 patients during run-in phase of trial* and 1586 during evaluable period. Values are numbers (percentages) of patients unless stated otherwise

View this table:

CPR process information was available for 1174 (74%) of the subjects. Compared with the cases with CPR process data, the cases without data were more likely to have been witnessed by emergency medical services, to have arrested in a public location, to have had a first rhythm of ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation or “no shock, no strip available” (when the defibrillator did not fire and no electrocardiogram was available to confirm the initial rhythm), and have had a longer interval between the call to the emergency medical services and their arrival at the scene. Cases without CPR process data were also less likely to have prehospital return of spontaneous circulation. There were no differences between the cases with and without CPR process data in age, sex, bystander witnessed, bystander CPR, return of spontaneous circulation on arrival at the emergency department, or survival to discharge.

The median (interquartile range) time of CPR process information available for analysis was 6 (0–10) minutes. In the feedback-on arm, emergency medical service providers muted the audible feedback in 114 (14%) of the cases. During all available minutes of data (table 2), cases randomised to feedback-on compared with feedback-off had significantly lower mean compression rate (103 v 108 per minute, P<0.001), higher chest compression fraction (66% v 64%, P=0.016), deeper chest compressions (40 v 38 mm, P=0.005), and fewer chest compressions with incomplete release (10% v 15%, P<0.001). There were no significant differences between groups for number of ventilations per minute, proportion of patients receiving more than one shock, or mean number of shocks per case. Similar relationships were evident when only the first five minutes of data were examined (table 2).

Table 2

 Data on cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) process received by patients with a cardiac arrest outside hospital: 233 patients during run-in phase of trial* and 1586 during evaluable period

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A descriptive examination of the distribution of the CPR process variables (fig 2) suggests that provision of real-time feedback resulted in more consistent compression rate and compression depth and fewer compressions with incomplete release, with the feedback-on group having a narrower frequency distribution than the feedback-off group and smaller standard deviations in each of the plots.

Figure2

Fig 2 Frequency distribution of the rate, fraction, and depth of chest compressions and the percentage of chest compressions with incomplete release during cardiopulmonary resuscitation stratified by whether monitor-defibrillators provided real-time feedback (“feedback-on”) or not (“feedback-off”)

During the evaluation period, the proportion of patients with prehospital return of spontaneous circulation (primary outcome) did not significantly differ between the feedback-on group (361/815 patients (44%)) and feedback-off group (345/771 (45%)) (table 3). Similarly, presence of a pulse at the emergency department, survival to hospital discharge, and discharge awake did not significantly differ by feedback status (table 3).

Table 3

 Clinical outcomes of patients receiving cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) outside hospital: 233 patients during run-in phase of trial and 1586 during evaluable period*. Values are numbers (percentages) of patients unless stated otherwise

View this table:

Subgroup comparisons, planned a priori, by sex and cause of cardiac arrest (presumed cardiac origin v not) did not reveal differences in outcomes between the two study groups. However, analysis by first documented electrocardiographic rhythm showed that, among those with an initial electrocardiogram rhythm of asystole, a lower proportion of patients in the feedback-on group had a pulse at arrival in the emergency department than in the feedback-off group (43 (13%) v 59 (18%), P=0.029) (table 4). Hospital treatments for the patients surviving at least one day and the discharge status for those surviving to hospital discharge were similar for both feedback-off and feedback-on groups (table 5).

Table 4

 Clinical outcomes of patients receiving cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) outside hospital during evaluable period of trial* by initial cardiac rhythm recorded. Values are numbers (percentages) of patients unless stated otherwise

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Table 5

 Hospital treatments and status at hospital discharge among patients receiving cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) outside hospital during evaluable period of trial*. Values are numbers (percentages†) of patients

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Table 6 presents the analysis for possible carryover effects by comparing the clusters first randomised to feedback-on with those clusters first randomised to feedback-off during the first two randomisation periods. There was no evidence for a carryover effect. In a retrospective analysis, we did note an apparent outcome difference between feedback-off and feedback-on based on the randomisation period. Feedback-off during these first two randomisation periods was associated with a greater likelihood of survival than feedback-on (15% v 10%, cluster adjusted average difference −5.5 (95% confidence interval −9.6 to −1.3)). However, for subsequent randomisation periods, feedback-on was associated with a greater likelihood of survival (13% v 10%, cluster adjusted average difference 1.6 (−3.1 to 6.4)). A similar relation was observed for the restoration of spontaneous circulation outcome, whereby feedback-off was associated with greater likelihood of restoration of spontaneous circulation during the first two randomisation periods and feedback-on was associated with greater likelihood of restoration of spontaneous circulation during subsequent randomisation periods.

Table 6

 Tests for carryover effect by comparison of the clusters of cardiopulmonary resuscitations (CPR) outside hospital first randomised to feedback-on with those clusters first randomised to feedback-off during the first two randomisation periods of trial*

View this table:

Discussion

This randomised controlled trial among people having a cardiac arrest outside hospital compared performance and outcomes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation for subjects who were treated with or without real-time audio and visual CPR feedback. The proportion of patients with return of spontaneous circulation did not significantly differ between feedback-on (44%) and feedback-off (45%) groups. Similarly, the secondary outcomes of the presence of a pulse at arrival at the emergency department, survival to hospital discharge, and neurological status at discharge did not significantly differ by assigned feedback status. Providing real-time feedback did result in CPR performance closer to the established resuscitation guidelines.

During cardiac arrest, CPR can help sustain left ventricular filling, prevent right ventricular distension, and maintain a measure of systemic arterial perfusion to the brain and heart.15 Early bystander CPR can improve the likelihood of resuscitation. Several experimental studies have indicated that the specific composition, timing, and quantity of CPR (chest compressions and ventilations) can influence the likelihood of successful resuscitation, suggesting that the content of CPR may be modified or refined to improve survival.3 16 17 To this end, major systematic changes in prehospital CPR performance have been associated with important advances in survival, providing support for the concept that the characteristics of CPR can affect outcome.18 19 20 In general, these protocol-level changes have increased the quantity of chest compressions and, in turn, limited delays and interruptions in CPR.

Comparisons with other studies

Real-time feedback potentially helps improve CPR by prompting providers to deliver the various components of resuscitation (such as depth and rate of chest compressions) as close to the established guidelines as possible. The Q-CPR software used in this study and the related software in the voice advisory training manikin have been studied in training, simulated resuscitation, and field conditions. For training, the voice advisory manikin software improves skill acquisition and retention in both lay public and prehospital care providers.21 22 However, use of the voice advisory software to guide CPR performance by nurses, field emergency medical service providers, and paramedic students on a manikin has typically limited the effects to increasing chest compression depth.23 24 25

Two observational studies, one prehospital and one in hospital, examined the association between real-time feedback and clinical outcomes. The prehospital investigation observed an increase in chest compression depth and a reduction in chest compression rate associated with feedback.7 The study in hospital observed no change in CPR measures associated with feedback.8 Neither study randomised the intervention nor observed a difference in clinical outcome associated with feedback, but neither study was adequately powered to detect a clinically important effect.

Our study randomised the feedback intervention in more than 1500 cardiac arrest cases and was sufficiently powered to detect a change in prehospital return of spontaneous circulation of 10%. The intervention did produce chest compressions that were on average 2 mm deeper (38 v 40 mm), five compressions per minute slower (108 v 103), more likely to have complete release (85% v 90%), and less likely to be interrupted or delayed (chest compression fraction of 64% v 66%). However, these changes in CPR process did not translate to improvements in clinical outcomes.

Strengths and limitations of the study

A variety of explanations may account for this lack of effect on survival. Firstly, feedback induced changes in CPR performance may be too small to affect outcome. This and other studies indicate that feedback can modify CPR performance; and CPR performance has been associated with outcome.5 Nevertheless, larger changes in CPR may be required to alter survival. Improvements in the content, delivery, and interface of real-time feedback may enable greater changes in CPR performance.

Secondly, the influence of feedback on outcome may be related to baseline CPR performance. Feedback may have a greater potential impact in settings where CPR performance is poorest. In our study the CPR measures achieved in the feedback-off arm were better than previously reported for outside hospital, leaving little opportunity for improvement by real-time feedback.

Thirdly, the current CPR guidelines that are encouraged by real-time feedback may not be optimal. For example, feedback lowered the average compression rate from 108 to 103, consistent with guideline recommendations, but there is no evidence that a rate of 100 per minute is superior to 110 per minute. Indeed, a higher rate would produce more total chest compressions and might produce better circumstances for resuscitation. The ability for feedback to improve outcomes is only as good as the understanding used to inform the CPR guidelines.

Fourthly, the style of feedback tested in this study was corrective (that is, input was provided only when CPR performance did not meet guidelines) as opposed to prescriptive (such as a continuous metronome). It is possible that the feedback distracted from other aspects of resuscitation, offsetting any benefit. Other forms of feedback or the different styles in which feedback is delivered may produce different results.

This trial has several potential limitations. Providers could not be blinded to the intervention so that their care could have been influenced by their perceptions of the merit of feedback. Awareness that CPR performance was being monitored might have produced a Hawthorne effect regardless of intervention arm, making it more difficult to show a difference.26 Indeed, measures of CPR complied more closely with guidelines during the evaluable phase compared with the run-in phase for both feedback-on and feedback-off arms.

We cannot rule out the possibility of a training effect in clusters reassigning from feedback-off to feedback-on. However, given that the treatment of cardiac arrest by an individual prehospital care provider occurs infrequently, the likelihood of two cases treated by an individual provider around the time of reassignment to the other treatment arm is small.

The emergency medical services participating in this study may not be typical of agencies across North America. Although diverse in both operational practices and population served, agencies with the resources and commitment required to participate in prehospital clinical trials may deliver a different level of care from those that do not.27 We made no corrections for the multiple comparisons made between feedback-on and feedback-off. These limitations are offset by the study’s strengths—a randomised trial design with rigorous data collection procedures within a well developed clinical trial group.

The study evaluated one style of feedback. It is possible that the current version of feedback improved some parts but distracted from other aspects of resuscitation, offsetting any benefit. Interestingly, retrospective analysis suggested feedback-on was associated with lower likelihood of favourable outcome during the first two randomisation periods and a greater likelihood of successful resuscitation for subsequent randomisation periods. These results may be due to chance, but other potential explanations include the presence of a learning curve, whereby the feedback became more effective as providers gained experience with the interface. Other feedback modalities or content may produce different results.

Conclusions

Provision of real-time feedback during CPR by emergency medical services did not alter the proportion of subjects achieving return of spontaneous circulation in the field even though CPR performance was closer to established guidelines when feedback was provided. It is likely that successful resuscitation requires an integrated and timely set of actions, of which CPR is a core component. Feedback provides a strategy to alter individual CPR performance, although the current feedback alone did not improve outcome. Ultimately the role of feedback may be determined by our understanding of cardiac arrest and resuscitation physiology coupled with efforts to optimise the effectiveness of CPR feedback.

What is already known on this topic

  • The composition, timing, and quantity of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (chest compressions and ventilations) can influence the likelihood of successful resuscitation

  • Real time cardiopulmonary feedback has been shown to improve short term outcomes in some emergency medical service systems

What this study adds

  • Provision of real-time feedback during cardiopulmonary resuscitation by emergency medical services resulted in resuscitation performance closer to established guidelines

  • However, the feedback did not improve patients’ survival to hospital discharge

Notes

Cite this as: BMJ 2011;342:d512

Footnotes

  • Contributors: All authors contributed to the final study design, data interpretation, and manuscript revision. DH and CWC implemented the study in the Pennsylvania sites, TDR and PJK implemented the study in Washington. IGS implemented the study in Ontario. SE-S, SSE, and GN wrote the statistical analysis plan and performed the analyses at the end of subject enrolment. DH drafted the manuscript and coordinated subsequent revisions. DH is guarantor of the work, but all authors had full access to the data and can take responsibility for their integrity and the accuracy of the data analysis.

  • Funding: The Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium is supported by a series of cooperative agreements with 10 regional clinical centres and one data coordinating centre (5U01 HL077863, HL077881, HL077871 HL077872, HL077866, HL077908, HL077867, HL077885, HL077887, HL077873, HL077865) from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute in partnership with the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, US Army Medical Research & Materiel Command, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)-Institute of Circulatory and Respiratory Health, Defence Research and Development Canada, the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, and the American Heart Association. The monitor-defibrillators used in the study were donated to participating emergency medical services by Philips Healthcare, Andover, Massachusetts, USA, with support from Laerdal Medical AS, Stavanger, Norway. The sponsors had no role in the design and conduct of the study or in the collection, management, or analysis of the data. The sponsors were provided an opportunity to make non-binding comments on the manuscript before submission.

  • Competing interests: All authors have completed the Unified Competing Interest form at www.icmje.org/COI_disclosure.pdf (available on request from the corresponding author) and declare that 1) all authors have support from the listed funding agencies for the submitted work; 2) financial relationships with companies that might have an interest in the submitted work (DH, CWC, TDR, and GN received funding from Laerdal Medical or the Laerdal Foundation for Acute Medicine, CWC holds a patent related to defibrillation currently licensed to Medtronic ERS, TDR has received funding from Philips Healthcare, GKS holds stock in the Medtronic Corporation and is the inventor on two patents related to implantable defibrillators, assigned to Boston Scientific, GN has received research funding from Baxter and the Medtronic Foundation and is a research collaborator with Gambro Renal (Lakewood, CO), Sotera Wireless (San Diego, CA), and Lifebridge Medizintechnik AG (Ampfing, Germany), GN and CWC are compensated by the American Heart Association as committee chair, co-chair, member of affiliate board of directors, or worksheet reviewer); 3) no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.

  • Ethical approval: The study was approved by the local institutional review or research ethics boards for each participating agency, with waiver of informed consent under minimal risk criteria.

  • Data sharing: A copy of the full trial protocol can be obtained from the University of Washington Clinical Trials Center.

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References

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