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Incidence and Etiology of System Exchanges in Patients Receiving Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation

Bernhard Nagler, Alexander Hermann, Oliver Robak, Peter Schellongowski, Nina Buchtele, Andja Bojic, Monika Schmid, Christian Zauner, Max P. Winter, Gottfried Heinz, Roman Ullrich, Felix Kraft, Dominik Wiedemann, Martin H. Bernardi, Thomas Staudinger, Wolfgang Lamm

2021ASAIO Journal18 citationsDOI

Abstract

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has established as a cornerstone therapy in severe acute respiratory distress syndrome and refractory hemodynamic failure. As circuit integrity is crucial for adequate organ support, component failure may necessitate a system exchange. In this retrospective study, incidence and etiology of system exchanges during applications of venovenous, venoarterial ECMO, and extracorporeal CO2 removal were examined. Sixty-three (44.4%) of 142 patients were affected by one or more exchanges, totaling 105 replaced circuits. The predominant exchange reason was clotting (n = 20), followed by hemolysis (n = 19), systemic coagulation disorders (n = 13), reconfiguration (n = 13), impaired gas exchange (n = 10), mechanical complications (n = 8), bleeding (n = 6), failed weaning (n = 5), prophylactic exchange (n = 3), and undocumented/other (n = 8). Nineteen (18.1%) events were classified as acute and 70 (66.7%) events as elective exchanges. Patients with circuit exchanges more frequently underwent renal replacement therapy at ECMO initiation (49.2% vs. 29.1%; p = 0.023), had a longer ECMO treatment duration (18 vs. 7.5 days, p < 0.001), and lower hospital survival (29.5% vs. 57.1%; p = 0.002). Considering the high occurrence of coagulation complications, further optimization of coagulation management is deemed necessary.

Topics & Concepts

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenationMedicineIncidence (geometry)EtiologyExtracorporealRenal replacement therapySurgeryAnesthesiaInternal medicinePhysicsOpticsMechanical Circulatory Support DevicesHeart Failure Treatment and ManagementCardiac Arrest and Resuscitation