Emergency Physician-Initiated Resuscitative Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation

2019 
Abstract Background Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has several applications as a resuscitative intervention, including extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR). ECPR is rarely initiated in the emergency department (ED) by emergency physicians outside regional academic institutions. Objectives To evaluate whether ECPR improves clinical outcomes after cardiac arrest when initiated by emergency physicians (EPs) in a nonacademic hospital. Methods and Materials We performed a retrospective analysis of prospectively identified consecutive EP-initiated ECMO subjects from a single community hospital over a 7-year period. Logistic regression and propensity models tested the association between ECPR and survival to hospital discharge compared with concurrent ECPR-eligible control subjects. Results Over 7 years (2010–2017), EPs initiated ECMO on 58 subjects; 44 (76%) were venoarterial cases (43 ECPR) initiated in the ED. Of those, 11 (25%) survived to discharge (n = 9 with cerebral performance category score 1) and most were still alive after 5 years (66%). Adjusting for known covariates, ECPR subjects were more likely than concurrent controls to survive to discharge (odds ratio 8.4; 95% confidence interval 1.2–60.4). Propensity analysis revealed a favorable trend toward survival to discharge after ECPR (odds ratio 2.0; 95% confidence interval 0.51–7.8). Conclusions Emergency physicians initiated ECMO with promising clinical outcomes. Prospective trials are needed to define the efficacy, safety, and cost-effectiveness of EP-initiated ECMO.
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