Age and Other Determinants of Survival After In-hospital Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation

Abstract
A retrospective review of 274 patients who received in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation was performed to determine whether age is independently associated with survival to discharge. Eighty-two (29.9 per cent) of the 274 patients were resuscitated initially, but only 25 (9.1 per cent) were discharged alive. Survival to discharge was significantly poorer in patients aged ≥70 years (6/175; 3.4 per cent) than in patients pr=−0.31, pr=−0.18, p<0.05) were independently associated with survival by multivariate analysis. These results indicate that advanced age is an important independent determinant of survival after resuscitation. This should be taken into consideration when making in-hospital resuscitation decisions.