AUSTIN, TEX. – Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation delivered during cardiopulmonary resuscitation allowed nearly twice as many patients to survive after discharge when compared against typical CPR-only procedures in a small, retrospective study.
“It’s no secret that conventional CPR is not terrifically successful,” Graham Peigh, a second-year medical student at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, said during the Hot Topics in Pulmonary and Critical Care session at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians. “Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [ECMO] gives patients a second chance at life.”
Mr. Peigh and his colleagues retrospectively analyzed 100 ECMO procedures performed on adults at a single teaching hospital during 2010-2013 and found that when ECMO was added to CPR, the survival rate to discharge went from 15% as calculated in a previously reported meta-analysis (J. Gen. Intern. Med. 1998;13:805-16) to 29% (P = .04).
When an arrested patient does not respond to CPR, cannulation through the femoral artery and vein can be combined with compressions to improve chances of survival.
In their analysis of ECMO delivered in an academic hospital setting, Mr. Peigh and his colleagues found that in the 24 cases in which ECMO was added to conventional CPR after the patients failed to respond to CPR alone, the survival rate with full neurologic recovery was 29%.
ECMO support was delivered in a number of scenarios, ranging from acute myocardial infarction to malignant arrhythmia to at least one case each of drug overdose induced cardiac arrest, septic shock, postcardiotomy failure, and acute rejection.
The ECMO support was provided for a mean of 5 days. The mean age for all patients studied was 47 years, and 15 were male. All cases followed a 24-hour hypothermia protocol.
Six of the ECMO-CPR patients died post ECMO of anoxic brain injury, stroke, or sepsis while still in the hospital, but the remaining seven patients (54%) survived after discharge and made full neurologic recoveries. The other 11 died during ECMO-CPR. During ECMO-CPR, 11 patients died of anoxic brain injury, stroke, metabolic acidosis, bowel necrosis, and family withdrawal of life support. Predictors of ECMO death were a pre-ECMO creatinine level of 1.7 mg/dL (P = .02) and the presence of acidosis (P = .04).
The ECMO survivor cohort also had what Mr. Peigh said were “encouraging” organ function results, with kidney and liver function remaining essentially unchanged after discharge.“Two of the patients who died of anoxic brain injuries were able to donate multiple organs for transplant,” Mr. Peigh said.
Previously reported ECMO data have shown there is at least a 20% increase in survival without notable neurologic effect, compared with conventional CPR (Lancet 2008;372:554-61; Crit. Care Med. 2011;39:1-7).
However, since these data were derived from centers where code teams were available at all times to treat a high volume of cardiac arrest patients, Mr. Peigh said the results – although indicative of the procedure’s value – “were not generalizable” to all institutions. But he noted that his and his colleagues’ study showed that even in institutions without a dedicated ECMO-CPR code team, ECMO-CPR resulted in demonstrably better outcomes for patients unresponsive to conventional CPR.
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