NEW FEDERALLY FUNDED RESEARCH PROGRAM AIMS TO IMPROVE SURVIVAL FROM CARDIAC ARREST AND SEVERE TRAUMA

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 
NIH News 
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Friday, March 24, 2006

CONTACT: NHLBI Communications Office, 301-496-4236,
nhlbi_news@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

NEW FEDERALLY FUNDED RESEARCH PROGRAM AIMS TO IMPROVE SURVIVAL FROM
CARDIAC ARREST AND SEVERE TRAUMA

A young mother is unconscious and bleeding from internal injuries caused
by a highway accident. A soldier is severely injured in a roadside
explosion. A 50-year-old man suffers a cardiac arrest as he gets ready
for work. For the "real" counterparts of these made-up case histories,
the chance of survival from life-threatening injury and cardiac arrest
is dismally low. Many more could survive if only they could be sustained
long enough to reach a hospital alive. However, most cardiac arrest
victims die before they reach the hospital, and traumatic injury is a
top killer in North America. With the launch of a massive research
program funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other
federal and Canadian agencies, scientists hope to learn the best ways to
improve survival chances from cardiac arrest and severe trauma.

The "Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium" (ROC) will conduct collaborative
clinical trials of promising new treatments for cardiac arrest (the
stopping of the heartbeat) and severe traumatic injury. Along with
Emergency Medical Services (EMS) agencies, ROC will involve public
safety agencies, regional hospitals, community healthcare institutions
and medical centers in 11 regions in the United States and Canada and as
many as 15,000 patients over a 3-year period. Communities involved in
ROC will learn about the study in a comprehensive community education
effort to be conducted over the next 6 months to a year.

"Surviving traumatic injury and cardiac arrest is a serious public
health issue. Tens of thousands of Americans die each year from sudden
cardiac arrest and trauma. The good news is that there is a growing body
of research -- basic research and small studies -- that suggests a
significant number of these people can be saved," said Elizabeth G.
Nabel, M.D., director of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
(NHLBI) of the NIH, the lead federal sponsor of the research effort.

Other funding agencies include the U.S. Department of Defense, the NIH's
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the Institute
of Circulatory and Respiratory Health of the Canadian Institutes of
Health Research, Defence Research and Development Canada, the Heart and
Stroke Foundation of Canada, and the American Heart Association. The
initial funding commitment to the Consortium is $50 million.

"This is the first time we have used large-scale clinical trials to
improve the treatment of patients with traumatic injury and cardiac
arrest. Similar studies in patients with heart attack and heart failure
have answered questions about the best treatments. As a result, we've
seen greatly improved survival for these disorders. That's what we want
to do with cardiac arrest and traumatic injury," said Myron Weisfeldt,
M.D., professor and chair of internal medicine at Johns Hopkins
University and chair of the steering committee for the research effort.

All of the interventions to be tested in the new program will have been
shown in smaller, single center studies to be safe and to potentially
have a life-saving effect. According to Weisfeldt, the Consortium's
testing of new techniques will provide the large-scale proof of
effectiveness needed to support widespread adoption and use.

An important goal of the ROC will be the evaluation of interventions in
terms of benefit to cognitive outcomes, as the ultimate goal of
resuscitation is to return victims to their prior functional capacity.

The first treatments to be tested will be highly concentrated forms of a
saline solution similar to the body's own fluids. Typically, in the
crucial early minutes before blood transfusions can be safely
administered in hospital, trauma patients receive normal saline solution
intravenously in the field to compensate for blood loss and buy time. In
the new trial, trauma patients with either signs of blood loss or severe
brain injury will receive one of three saline solutions -- standard
normal saline, high concentration saline, or high concentration saline
with dextran, a circulation-enhancing substance. The two concentrated
solutions are designed to compensate for blood loss more effectively,
lessen excessive inflammatory responses and prevent brain swelling.
These effects in turn could potentially lead to a reduction in organ
failure for patients with major blood loss and improved function for
patients with brain injury.

The second study will test a device to enhance blood flow during CPR.
This device is a one-way valve that fits between the airbag used to
introduce air into a person in cardiac arrest and the flexible plastic
tube that goes through the nose or mouth and into the lungs to help with
breathing. The valve can also be used with a facemask that goes over the
patient's nose and mouth. During CPR, the one-way valve creates a small
vacuum inside the patient's chest, which increases the return flow of
blood to the heart.

Other possible future studies include testing of new drug approaches to
aid resuscitation from cardiac arrest and evaluation of novel strategies
to control hemorrhage.

There are an estimated 330,000 out-of-hospital cardiac deaths each year
in the United States. Most of these are from sudden cardiac arrest,
although the exact numbers are not known. In cardiac arrest, the heart
stops beating effectively, blood does not circulate and no pulse can be
felt. The victim collapses suddenly into unconsciousness. Heart attacks,
which are caused by a blockage of a coronary artery, can sometimes lead
to cardiac arrest. A common underlying cause of sudden cardiac arrest is
an abrupt disorganization of the heart's rhythm called ventricular
fibrillation, which can be triggered by a heart attack or can just
represent a catastrophic rhythm disturbance. Unless cardiac arrest
victims are treated within minutes (by defibrillation to shock an
abnormally beating heart back into normal rhythm or CPR followed by or
in conjunction with other procedures), they will die.

Severe injury is also a major public health problem. It is the number
one killer of both children and young adults up to age 44. As a disease
of young people, it is also the leading cause of life years lost. In
2002, there were over 161,000 fatal injuries in the United States. The
leading causes of death following injury are brain injury, blood loss,
and organ failure from excessive inflammation.

In addition to rigorous review by an NHLBI-convened independent review
group, the clinical trials of the new Consortium will be conducted under
strict FDA guidelines that allow for patients in life- threatening
situations to participate in research without individual consent at
enrollment. The guidelines specify criteria that must be followed for a
study to have an exception from informed consent. These include:

-- Approval by an institutional review board (IRB), a committee of
experts and lay people established to review research.

-- Consultation with the community.

-- Public disclosure of the study's design before the study begins and
when the study is over to share results.

--  Notification of patients who were involved in the research.

-- Oversight by an independent group of experts charged with monitoring
the research for safety.

Each site's IRB will decide how best to inform the community,
recommending approaches that might include town meetings, newspaper
notices, random digit dialing surveys, and meetings with groups at high
risk of either cardiac arrest or trauma -- such as local motorcycle
clubs. In order to inform future studies involving exceptions from
informed consent, the community consultation process used in ROC will be
evaluated in at least one ancillary study.

"There is a high probability of benefit for patients participating in
these trials," said Joseph Ornato, M.D., the Consortium's co-chair for
cardiac arrest and chairman of the Department of Emergency Medicine at
the Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center in Richmond, VA.
"Not only have these therapies been shown to be potentially life-saving,
but also EMS personnel involved in the research will be trained in the
most up-to-date and effective methods of emergency treatment."

According to Tracey Hoke, M.D., Sc.M., NHLBI project officer for the
ROC, "A federal exception of informed consent can only be granted when
patients are in a life-threatening situation, when obtaining individual
informed consent is impossible, and when current therapy is unproven or
unsatisfactory. The most critical stipulation of the exception is that
there must be the potential for direct benefit to the patients enrolled.
In the case of ROC, this means that preliminary evidence of direct
survival benefit must be shown prior to the development of any trial."

"These initial studies, and those that follow, will change the way all
providers of trauma care, military and civilian, care for the most
critically injured," said COL John Holcomb, MD, the consortium co-chair
for trauma, and the Commander of the US Army Institute of Surgical
Research, San Antonio, TX. "For the first time we will know, based on
large and well designed studies, what interventions really make a
difference."

In a typical study scenario, a first responder will arrive at the scene
of the cardiac arrest or trauma and confirm the patient's diagnosis. The
emergency medical technician (EMT) will then assess whether the patient
meets the entrance criteria for the study and if so, treat the patient
with the study intervention.

Since the studies will be blinded, the EMTs in the field will not know
which treatment the patient receives. For example, in the first
consortium study testing the concentrated saline solutions, all
solutions of saline to be administered to patients will look alike,
although they will be numbered for later identification and analysis by
the study's scientists.

In addition to the clinical trials, the Consortium is also currently
enrolling patients into a database of all cardiac arrest and trauma
events. "This is the first multi-city comprehensive database with
information about how field treatment leads to patient survival," said
George Sopko, M.D., deputy project officer on the study and a medical
officer with NHLBI.

The study is coordinated by investigators at the University of
Washington, Seattle, Principal Investigator: Al Hallstrom, Ph.D.

The participating cities include:

-- Birmingham, AL: The Alabama Resuscitation Center is coordinated
through the University of Alabama at Birmingham (Central and possibly
Northern Alabama). Principal Investigator: Tom Terndrup, M.D.

-- Dallas, TX: The Dallas Center for Resuscitation Research is
coordinated through the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
(Dallas and surrounding cities to participate). Principal Investigator:
Ahamed Idris, M.D.

-- Iowa City, IA: The University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine-Iowa
Resuscitation Network is coordinated through the University of Iowa
(includes 10 cities throughout Iowa). Principal Investigator: Richard
Kerber, M.D.

-- Milwaukee, WI: The Milwaukee Resuscitation Research Center is
coordinated through the Medical College of Wisconsin. Principal
Investigator: Tom Aufderheide, M.D.

-- Ottawa, Ontario/Vancouver, BC (counts as two regions): The University
of Ottawa/University of British Columbia Collaborative RCC is
coordinated through the Ottawa Health Research Institute, University of
Ottawa, Ontario and St. Paul's Hospital, University of British Columbia
(includes additional 20 cities). Principal Investigator: Ian Stiell,
M.D., Co-Principal Investigator: Jim Christenson, M.D.

-- Pittsburgh, PA: The Pittsburgh Resuscitation Network is coordinated
through the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (includes several
suburbs). Principal Investigator: Clif Callaway, M.D., Ph.D.

-- Portland, OR: The Portland Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium is
coordinated through the Oregon Health and Science University (includes 4
counties). Principal Investigator: Jerris R. Hedges, M.D., MS.

-- San Diego, CA: The UCSD-San Diego Resuscitation Research Center is
coordinated through the University of California, San Diego (entire
county). Principal Investigator: David Hoyt, M.D.

-- Seattle and King County, WA: Seattle-King County Center for
Resuscitation Research at the University of Washington. Principal
investigator: Peter Kudenchuk, M.D.

-- Toronto, Ontario: The Toronto Regional Resuscitation Research out of
hospital Network is coordinated through the University of Toronto
(includes areas surrounding Toronto). Principal Investigator: Arthur
Slutsky, M.D., Co-Principal Investigators: Laurie Morrison, M.D. and
Paul Dorian, M.D. 

To interview NHLBI's Dr. Tracey Hoke, ROC project officer or NHLBI's Dr.
George Sopko, ROC deputy project officer, contact the NHLBI
Communications Office at 301-496-4236. To interview Dr. Weisfeldt or Dr.
Jeremy Sugarman, ROC ethicist and Harvey M. Meyerhoff Professor of
Bioethics and Medicine with the Phoebe R. Berman Bioethics Institute and
Department of Medicine Johns Hopkins University, call David March, Media
Relations and Public Affairs, Johns Hopkins Medicine at 410-955-1534. To
interview Dr. Ornato, call 804-828-7184. To interview COL Holcomb, call
210-916-2720.

Part of the National Institutes of Health, the National Heart, Lung, and
Blood Institute (NHLBI) plans, conducts, and supports research related
to the causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of heart, blood
vessel, lung, and blood diseases; and sleep disorders. The Institute
also administers national health education campaigns on women and heart
disease, healthy weight for children, and other topics. NHLBI press
releases and other materials are available online at: www.nhlbi.nih.gov.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) -- "The Nation's Medical
Research Agency" -- includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a
component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the
primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and
translational medical research, and it investigates the causes,
treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more
information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.
  
##
 
This NIH News Release is available online at:
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/mar2006/nhlbi-24.htm.

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