Background: Women experience worse neurological outcomes following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). It is unknown whether sex disparities exist in the use of targeted temperature management (TTM), a standard of care treatment to improve neurological outcomes.
Methods: We performed a retrospective study of prospectively collected patients who survived to hospital admission following OHCA from the Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival from 2013 through 2019. We compared receipt of TTM by sex in a mixed-effects model adjusted for patient, arrest, neighborhood, and hospital factors, with the admitting hospital modeled as a random intercept.
Results: Among 123,419 patients, women had lower rates of shockable rhythms (24.4 % vs. 39.2%, P < .001) and lower rates of presumed cardiac aetiologies for arrest (74.3% vs. 81.1%, P < .001). Despite receiving a similar rate of TTM in the field (12.1% vs. 12.6%, P = .02), women received less TTM than men upon admission to the hospital (41.6% vs. 46.4%, P < .001). In an adjusted mixed-effects model, women were less likely than men to receive TTM (Odds Ratio 0.91, 95% Confidence Interval 0.89 to 0.94). Among the 27,729 patients with data indicating the reason for not using TTM, a higher percentage of women did not receive TTM due to Do-Not-Resuscitate orders/family requests (15.1% vs. 11.4%, p < .001) and non-shockable rhythms (11.1% vs. 8.4%, p < .001).
Conclusions: We found that women received less TTM than men, likely due to early care limitations and a preponderance of non-shockable rhythms.
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; Disparities; Healthcare disparities; Heart arrest; Induced hypothermia; Post cardiac arrest care; Sex; Sex factors; Targeted temperature management; Therapeutic hypothermia; Therapeutics.
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