Background: Patients with heart failure (HF) have abnormal cellular anatomy and myocardial mechanics that may impact the initial rhythm and subsequent outcomes in cardiac arrest (CA).
Hypothesis: Patients with pre-existing HF are less likely to have ventricular fibrillation/pulseless ventricular tachycardia (VF/pVT) as the first documented rhythm in CA and have poorer survival than patients without pre-existing HF.
Purpose: Identify the first documented cardiac arrest rhythm (FDR) in hospitalized patients with and without a pre-existing history of HF.
Methods: We evaluated 60,389 consecutive, adult, index, pulseless CA events with documented initial rhythm in the National Registry of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation. The primary endpoint was the FDR in patients with and without a history of pre-existing HF. Secondary endpoints were return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), survival to discharge, and neurological outcome.
Results: Thirty three percent of patients had a pre-existing diagnosis of HF. HF patients were more likely to have VF/pVT (25.9 vs. 23.2%) and less likely to have asystole (34.4 vs. 35.3%, p=<.0001) than non-HF. There was no difference in survival to discharge (18.3 vs. 18.2%, p=.66), or good neurological outcomes (82.2 vs. 83.2%, p=.23) between the groups. Women were less likely to have VF/pVT as the first documented rhythm in both HF and non-HF groups.
Conclusions: Hospitalized patients with HF are more likely than those without HF to have VF/pVT as the FDR in CA, however the clinical magnitude of this difference is small. Overall survival and neurological outcomes are no different than hospitalized arrest patients without HF.