EBQ:Paramedic Trial: Difference between revisions

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==Funding==
==Funding==
*National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment Programme (UK)
*Physio-Control/Jolife AB provided LUCAS-2 devices
 
==See Also==
==See Also==
[[LINC Trial]]
[[LINC Trial]]

Latest revision as of 23:03, 21 March 2026

Under Review Journal Club Article
Perkins GD. et al.. "Mechanical versus manual chest compression for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (PARAMEDIC): a pragmatic, cluster randomised controlled trial". Lancet. 2015. 385(9972):947-55.
PubMed Full text PDF

Clinical Question

Does prehospital LUCAS-2 mechanical CPR improve survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest?

Conclusion

The use of LUCAS-2 in non-traumatic, out-of-hospital cardiac arrests did not show improvement over manual CPR in patient survival to 30 days.

Major Points

  • Survival to 30 days had no difference with 6% (LUCAS-2) vs. 7% (control)
  • No difference in ROSC, survival of event, survival to 3 months, or survival to 12 months
  • Decreased favorable neurologic outcome (CPC 1 or 2) in LUCAS-2 group

Study Design

Pragmatic, cluster randomized, controlled trial

Population

91 ambulance stations (selected for being urban and semi-urban) from 4 UK National Health Service (NHS) Ambulance Services (West Midlands, North East England, Wales, South Central).

Patient Demographics

  • No major differences in baseline characteristics
    • Mean age ~71 years
    • 63% male
    • ~87% presumed cardiac etiology
    • ~82% arrests occurred at home
    • ~62% witnessed arrests
    • ~44% bystander CPR performed before EMS arrival
    • ~6.4 minute response time from call to EMS arrival
    • ~82% given IV medications
    • ~46% intubated
    • ~67% transported to hospital

Inclusion Criteria

  • Vehicle included in trial is first on scene
  • Patient in cardiac arrest outside of a hospital
  • Resuscitation attempted
  • Known or believed to be ≥18 years of age

Exclusion Criteria

  • Cardiac arrest caused by trauma
  • Known or apparent pregnancy

Interventions

  • LUCAS-2 mechanical chest compression device during CPR (intervention group)
  • Manual chest compressions per standard resuscitation guidelines (control group)
  • Both groups received standard advanced life support care including defibrillation and drug administration
  • Randomization occurred at the cluster level (ambulance vehicle)

Outcomes

Primary Outcome

  • 30-day survival: mechanical CPR 6% vs manual CPR 7% (adjusted OR 0.86, 95% CI 0.64-1.15)

Secondary Outcomes

  • ROSC at hospital handover: mechanical 32% vs manual 31%
  • Survival to hospital discharge: mechanical 5.8% vs manual 6.8%
  • Favorable neurological outcome at 3 months (CPC 1-2): mechanical 5.0% vs manual 5.2%
  • No significant difference in any secondary outcome

Primary Outcome

Secondary Outcomes

Subgroup analysis

Criticisms

  • Cluster randomization at ambulance level may introduce bias if crew experience varies between vehicles
  • Time from cardiac arrest to LUCAS deployment was variable and may have reduced compression quality during transition
  • The study was pragmatic in design, meaning variation in how the device was deployed could affect results
  • A numerical (non-significant) trend toward worse outcomes with mechanical CPR was concerning
  • Crossover between groups was permitted when clinically indicated, potentially diluting treatment effects

External Links

Funding

  • National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment Programme (UK)
  • Physio-Control/Jolife AB provided LUCAS-2 devices

See Also

LINC Trial

Sources