Open Access 01-12-2019 | Lung Cancer | Research article
Identification of a potentially avoidable cardiopulmonary resuscitation in hematology and oncology wards
Published in: BMC Palliative Care | Issue 1/2019
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Background
In-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is one of undesirable situations. We tried to identify and characterize a potentially avoidable CPR in cancer patients who were hospitalized in hematology and oncology wards.
Methods
A potentially avoidable CPR was determined based on chemotherapy setting, disease status and clinical situation at the time when a cardiopulmonary arrest occurred, by using a consensus-driven medical records review of two physicians.
Results
One hundred thirty-seven patients among 12,437 patients hospitalized at hematology and oncology wards between March 2003 and June 2015 (1.1%) underwent a CPR. Eighty-eight patients (64.2%) were men. The majority of patients with a CPR had lung cancer (41, 29.9%), hematologic malignancy (24, 17.5%), stomach cancer (23, 16.8%) or lymphoma (20, 14.6%). A potentially avoidable CPR was identified in 51 patients (37.2%). In a multivariate analysis, advanced diseases and certain tumor types (e.g., lung cancer, lymphoma) were significant risk factors for a potentially avoidable CPR. Of patients who received a potentially avoidable CPR, 29 patients (56.9%) did not have a do-not-resuscitate documentation. A first return of spontaneous circulation rate (ROSC) and in-hospital survival rate (IHSR) were much lower in patients with a potentially avoidable CPR than those with a CPR that was not avoidable (ROSC: 39.2% vs 53.5%, P = 0.106; IHSR: 2.0% vs 12.8%, P = 0.032, respectively).
Conclusions
A potentially avoidable CPR was common at hematology and oncology wards. A potentially avoidable CPR frequently occurred in advanced diseases and certain tumor types. Furthermore, cancer patients who received a potentially avoidable CPR showed the worse prognosis.