SGEM#350: How Did I Get Epi Alone? Vasopressin and Methylprednisolone for In-Hospital Cardiac Arrests
The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine - A podcast by Dr. Ken Milne
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Date: November 10th, 2021 Reference: Andersen, et al: Effect of Vasopressin and Methylprednisolone vs Placebo on Return of Spontaneous Circulation in Patients With In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. JAMA Sept 2021. Guest Skeptic: Dr. Neil Dasgupta is an emergency physician and ED intensivist from Long Island, NY, and currently an assistant clinical professor and Director of Emergency Critical Care at Nassau University Medical Center. Case: A code blue is called for a 71-year-old male in-patient that is boarding in the emergency department (ED). He had been admitted the night before for a new diagnosis of rapid atrial fibrillation. He has a history of hypertension, dyslipidemia, and type-2 diabetes. His medications include a beta-blocker, statin, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACE-I), metformin, ASA and direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC). You arrive and see that the Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) algorithm is being followed for adult cardiac arrest patients with pulseless electrical activity (PEA). Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is in progress. The monitor shows a non-shockable rhythm. Epinephrine is provided and you quickly place an advanced airway. A second dose of epinephrine is given, and you start to think about reversible causes and your next steps for in-hospital cardiac arrests (IHCA). Background: We have looked an IHCA a couple of times on the SGEM. The first time we looked at this issue on (SGEM#50). This was also the first SGEM JC done where Dr. William Osler started the Journal Club initiative at McGill University. We reviewed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group trial done in three Greek tertiary hospitals. This trial (n=268) reported increased return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and increased survival to hospital discharge with good neurologic function with a vasopressin, steroids, and epinephrine (VSE) protocol compared to epinephrine alone. We felt this was interesting but would need to be validated/replicated before changing our IHCA protocols. Corticosteroids have been suggested as a possible therapy in these cardiac arrest situations. A SRMA published in 2020 on the use of steroids after cardiac arrest reported an increase in ROSC and survival to discharge but was limited by the availability of adequately powered high-quality RCTs (Liu et al JIMR 2020). We covered another SRMA that was published in 2021 looking at the same issue of whether the use of corticosteroids impact neurologic outcomes and mortality in patients with a cardiac arrest (SGEM#329)? These authors reported a statistical increase in good neurologic outcome and survival to hospital discharge with steroids but not survival at one year or longer. This study provided weak evidence in support of using corticosteroids for IHCA as part of a VSE protocol. Answering clinical questions about cardiac arrest with clinical trials has always been fraught with difficulty. However, cardiac arrest is something we regularly treat in the emergency department, and we need more high-quality data to inform our care. Vasopressin had been included as a part of the American Heart Association (AHA) ACLS protocol for quite a while but was removed in favor of a vasopressor monotherapy strategy with epinephrine. The tide now is shifting in resuscitation research to shift our focus from obtaining ROSC to measuring functionality and good neurologic outcomes. In the context of questioning epinephrine’s role in ACLS after Paramedic2, we look at using the VSE protocol in cardiac arrest. Clinical Question: Does adding a combination of ...