Pediatric cardiac arrest occurs most in the prehospital setting. Most of them are due to respiratory failure (e.g., trauma, drowning, respiratory distress), where hypoxia leads to cardiac arrest. Generally, emergency medical services (EMS) first use basic airway management techniques i.e., the use of a bag-valve-mask (BVM) device, to restore oxygenation in pediatric OHCA victims. However, these devices present many drawbacks and limitations. Intermediate airway management, i.e., the use of SGA devices, especially the i-gel® has several advantages. It has been shown to enhance both circulatory and ventilatory parameters. There is increasing evidence that IAM devices can safely be used in children. In two pediatric studies of OHCA, American paramedics had significantly higher success rates with SGA devices than with TI. A neonatal animal model showed that the use of SGA was feasible and non-inferior to TI in this population. However, data regarding the effect of IAM with an i-gel® versus the use of a BVM on ventilation parameters during pediatric OHCA is missing. The hypothesis underlying this study is that, in case of pediatric OHCA, early insertion of an i-gel® device without prior BVM ventilation should improve ventilation parameters in comparison with the standard approach consisting in BVM ventilations.
Pediatric cardiac arrest is a high-risk, low-frequency event associated with death or severe neurological sequelae in survivors. Most occur in the prehospital setting. Despite advances in resuscitation science and survival improvement over the last decades, survival remains low, with only approximately 6% to 20% of children surviving to hospital discharge after pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Most triggers of pediatric OHCA are respiratory in nature, with sudden infant death syndrome, trauma and drowning among the main etiologies, where hypoxia leads to cardiac arrest. Prompt and effective airway management is therefore paramount when responding to a pediatric OHCA. Any delay in intermediate or advanced airway management has been associated with a decreased chance of survival. The debate about the optimal airway management strategy that should be used in pediatric OHCA is, however, still ongoing. Generally, emergency medical services (EMS) first use basic airway management techniques i.e., the use of a bag-valve-mask (BVM) device, to restore oxygenation in pediatric OHCA victims. However, these devices present many drawbacks and limitations. First, airtightness must be ensured to enable adequate oxygenation. Second, the use of BVM is associated with gastric air insufflation. This can alter oxygenation by restricting total lung capacity and, consequently, lung compliance. Since decreased lung compliance requires the use of higher pressures to reach the same tidal volume, gastric inflation can indirectly impair venous return. In addition, chest compressions during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) must be interrupted to provide ventilations when basic airway management devices are used. However, these interruptions decrease coronary and cerebral blood flow and should be minimized as they have been associated with decreased survival both in animals and humans. On the other hand, advanced airway management, i.e., tracheal intubation (TI), provides optimal airtightness -thereby avoiding gastric inflation and risk of regurgitation- while allowing the provision of asynchronous ventilations during CPR. However, advanced airway management requires advanced skills that must be maintained through regular practice. Depending on the regional context, skilled prehospital providers may not be immediately available, if at all. This is particularly important when taking care of critically ill children, whom many consider difficult to intubate. The failure rate of TI at first attempt in case of pediatric CPR is high, even in the hospital setting, and associated with unfavorable neurological and survival outcomes. Recently, a registry-based study reported these outcomes to be worse after pediatric OHCA when emergency physicians used TI rather than supraglottic airway (SGA) devices. The interpretation of these results is however limited by the lack of data regarding physician experience and TI attempts. In line with the above listed limitations of basic or advanced airway management devices, intermediate airway management (IAM) i.e., the use of SGA devices \[18\], could represent a valuable alternative in prehospital settings. One of the best studied SGA devices is the i-gel®, which is both easy and fast to insert, and provides high leak pressures. Its use is associated with a high overall success rate and is easily remembered. Regurgitation and aspiration are not more frequent with IAM devices than with TI and are much less likely than when a BVM device is used. The use of an i-gel® enables continuous chest compressions in most cases, and a higher first rate of successful initial ventilation. This device has been found to increase the chest compression fraction (CCF) and improve ventilations parameters in an adult model of OHCA. In real OHCA, compared to TI, similar outcomes at 30 days and 6 months were found. There is increasing evidence that IAM devices can safely be used in children. In two pediatric studies of OHCA, American paramedics had significantly higher success rates with SGA devices than with TI. A neonatal animal model showed that the use of SGA was feasible and non-inferior to TI in this population. However, data regarding the effect of IAM with an i-gel® versus the use of a BVM on ventilation parameters during pediatric OHCA is missing. The hypothesis underlying this study is that, in case of pediatric OHCA, early insertion of an i-gel® device without prior BVM ventilation should improve ventilation parameters in comparison with the standard approach consisting in BVM ventilations. For this purpose, a prospective, multicenter, crossover, randomized controlled trial with two groups will be conduct in four EMS in different French-speaking part of Switzerland. This will be a simulation-based study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
34
Ventilations will be delivered through an i-gel ® device
Ventilations will be delivered using a bag-valve-mask
ACE Genève Ambulances
Chêne-Bougeries, Canton of Geneva, Switzerland
Ambulances de la Ville de Sion
Sion, Valais, Switzerland
Genève TEAM Ambulances
Geneva, Switzerland
SK Ambulances
Geneva, Switzerland
Alveolar ventilation per minute
It will be determined by subtracting the dead space volume from each ventilation, then multiplied by the ventilations' count, and divided by the duration of the ventilation period (i.e., 10 minutes - time to the first ventilation). The simulated child's dead space volume corresponds to about 27 ml using the formula proposed by Numa and Newth. The physiological tidal volume range is of 5 to 8 ml/kg, corresponding to 45 to 72 ml for the simulated child's.
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The proportion, and number of ventilations below, within and over the target volume
The target volume is 45 to 72 ml.
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The time to the first efficient ventilation
Corresponds to the time elapsed between T0 (the first therapeutical action) and the first efficient ventilation (equal or superior to 45 ml)
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The time to the first compression
Corresponds to the time elapsed between T0 (the first therapeutical action) and the first compression
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The chest compression fraction
Corresponds to the time during which compressions have been performed on the total CPR time
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The chest compression rate
Corresponds to the number of compressions delivered by minute
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The proportion of chest compressions below, within and over the target rate
The target rate is 100 to 120 compressions per minute
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The compression depth
Corresponds to the depth of the chest compressions
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The proportion of chest compressions below and within the target depth
The threshold is 4.3 cm (corresponding to one third of the manikin's measured anteroposterior chest depth)
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The proportion of complete chest recoil
Corresponds to the proportions of compression released to at least 5 mm from the baseline
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The time to first epinephrine injection
Corresponds to the time elapsed between the first therapeutical action (T0) and the time-point where epinephrine is administered
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
The proportion of scenarios in which epinephrine is administered within 5 minutes
The part of scenarios where epinephrine was administered following the recommandations
Time frame: 10 minutes of scenario
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