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Circulation Conference: American Heart Association's ; 146(Supplement 1), 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2194355

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Timely treatment of ST elevation myocardial infarction [STEMI] requires ongoing coordinated care between emergency departments, paramedics, and primary percutaneous coronary (PCI) intervention facilities. Method(s): To provide a current view and a national benchmark, we examined 121,576 patient records submitted by 648 hospitals participating the GWTG-CAD registry from Q2 2018 through Q3 2021 [median age 63, women 29%, Black 11%, Hispanic 8%, admission cardiac arrest 5%, shock 7%, heart failure 7%, Covid 0.2%, presentation EMS 47%, walk in 27%, transfer 22%] Results: Reperfusion method for all patients included primary PCI 87%, fibrinolysis 5%, and no reperfusion 8% [increasing from 7 to 9% during the study period]. Median time from symptom onset to reperfusion was shortest for EMS patients 148 minutes, followed by walk-in 195 minutes, ground transferred 238 minutes, and air transferred 247 minutes. Process times did not improve during the study period. First medical contact to device times increased by 5 minutes for EMS and ground transferred patients in Q2 2020 corresponding with the pandemic onset, and adjusted mortality was significantly higher in the final 3 quarters compared to Q2 2018 [OR, 95% CI 1.28(1.07-1.53);1.35(1.13-1.61);1.23(1.03-1.48)]. Patients treated within guideline goals had significantly lower mortality [Figure]. Conclusion(s): These data reaffirm the association between process times and lower mortality for STEMI patients. They also identify concerning trends and opportunities for improved care. Increasing delays in treatment, particularly for hospital transfer, greater numbers of untreated patients, and increased risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality all provide strong impetus for renewed focus on STEMI systems. Regional collaborative efforts led by coordinators and informed by a common data system have the potential to reverse these trends and improve survival.

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