New Algorithm Predicts Sudden Cardiac Arrest Risk

Ambulance
Photo by Camilo Jimenez on Unsplash

Cedars-Sinai researchers have developed a clinical algorithm that is the first to be able to distinguish between treatable sudden cardiac arrest and untreatable forms of the condition. The findings, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Clinical Electrophysiology, may help prevent sudden cardiac arrest based on key risk factors identified in this study.

“All sudden cardiac arrest is not the same,” explained Professor Sumeet Chugh, MD, lead author of the study. “Until now, no prior research has distinguished between potentially treatable sudden cardiac arrest versus untreatable forms that cause death in almost all instances.”

In the US, 300 000 people die due to out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest each year. For those affected, 90% will die within 10 minutes of cardiac arrest.

Prevention could have an enormous impact for this largely fatal condition. The biggest challenge, however, lies in distinguishing between those who stand to benefit the most from an implantable cardioverter defibrillator and those who would not.

“Defibrillators are expensive and unnecessary for individuals with the type of sudden cardiac arrest that will not respond to an electrical shock,” said Prof Chugh. “However, for patients with treatable, or ‘shockable,’ forms of the disease, a defibrillator is lifesaving.”

Prof Chugh said that this new research provides a clinical risk assessment algorithm that can better identify patients at highest risk of treatable sudden cardiac arrest—and thus, a better understanding of those patients who would benefit from a defibrillator.

The risk assessment algorithm consists of 13 clinical, electrocardiogram, and echocardiographic variables that could put a patient at higher risk of treatable sudden cardiac arrest.

The risk factors include diabetes, myocardial infarction, atrial fibrillation, stroke, heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, seizure disorders, syncope—a temporary loss of consciousness caused by a fall in blood pressure—and four separate indicators found with an electrocardiogram test, including heart rate.

Source: EurekAlert!