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The 10-Year Trend of Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrests: a Korean Nationwide Population-Based Study

Seung‐Young Roh, Jong‐Il Choi, Sang Hyun Park, Yun Gi Kim, Jaemin Shim, Jin Seok Kim, Kyungdo Han, Young‐Hoon Kim

2021Korean Circulation Journal31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: It is crucial to understand the exact public health burden of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) cases; this is presently unknown since sufficient episodes are not reported in registry studies. We aimed to evaluate the epidemiologic features and outcomes of non-traumatic OHCA. METHODS: During January 2008 to December 2017, we enrolled 387,665 patients who had been assigned a code for sudden cardiac arrest or had undergone cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the emergency room using the Korean National Health Insurance Service database. Those whose arrest was of non-cardiac origin were excluded. RESULTS: The incidence of OHCA per 100,000 patients increased steadily from 48.2 in 2008 to, 53.8 in 2011, 60.1 in 2014, and 66.7 in 2017, with a 1-year survival rate of 8.2%. Age and sex-adjusted mortality rates showed a decreasing trend. The hazard ratio was 1.0015 in 2009, 0.9865 in 2012, 0.9769 in 2015, and 0.9629 in 2017 (p for trend <0.0001), with coronary artery disease-related OHCA accounting for 59.8% of the total. Subgroups with coronary artery disease-related OHCA were more likely to be older and have a higher prevalence of all related comorbidities, excluding malignancy, than those with non-coronary artery disease-related OHCA. CONCLUSIONS: This nationwide population-based study showed that the incidence of OHCA in Korea had increased during the last decade. The post OHCA 1-year mortality rate showed a poor outcome but improved gradually.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCoronary artery diseaseIncidence (geometry)Hazard ratioPopulationCardiopulmonary resuscitationSudden cardiac arrestEmergency medicineInternal medicineResuscitationConfidence intervalEnvironmental healthOpticsPhysicsCardiac Arrest and ResuscitationMechanical Circulatory Support DevicesAcute Myocardial Infarction Research