Design and implementation of the hospital airway resuscitation trial

Ari Moskowitz, Luke Andrea, Ariel L. Shiloh, John Cardasis, Colleen Carty, Mimi Kim, Xianhong Xie, Susan McAllen, David Esses, Carlo Lutz, Mai Takematsu, Jose Romero, Kristen Schimmrich, Daniel G. Fein, Amos Dodi, Samuel J. Rednor, Maneesha D. Bangar, Amira M. Mohamed, Lewis A. Eisen, Henry E. WangMichael W. Donnino, Michelle Ng Gong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Guidelines for the management of in-hospital cardiac arrest resuscitation are often drawn from evidence generated in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest populations and applied to the in-hospital setting. Approach to airway management during resuscitation is one example of this phenomenon, with the recommendation to place either a supraglottic airway or endotracheal tube when performing advanced airway management during in-hospital cardiac arrest based mainly in clinical trials conducted in the out-of-hospital setting. The Hospital Airway Resuscitation Trial (HART) is a pragmatic cluster-randomized superiority trial comparing a strategy of first choice supraglottic airway to a strategy of first choice endotracheal intubation during resuscitation from in-hospital cardiac arrest. The design includes a number of innovative elements such as a highly pragmatic design drawing from electronic health records and a novel primary outcome measure for cardiac arrest trials—alive-and-ventilator free days. Many of the topics explored in the design of HART have wide relevance to other trials in in-hospital cardiac arrest populations.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number100512
JournalResuscitation Plus
Volume17
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2024

Keywords

  • Advanced airway management
  • Clinical trial
  • In-hospital cardiac arrest
  • Supraglottic airway

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Emergency Medicine
  • Emergency
  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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