Usefulness of routine laboratory parameters in the decision to treat refractory cardiac arrest with extracorporeal life support

Abstract Aim To evaluate the usefulness of routine laboratory parameters in the decision to treat refractory cardiac arrest patients with extracorporeal life support (ECLS). Methods Sixty-six adults with witnessed cardiac arrest of cardiac origin unrelated to poisoning or hypothermia undergoing card...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Resuscitation 2011-09, Vol.82 (9), p.1154-1161
Hauptverfasser: Mégarbane, Bruno, Deye, Nicolas, Aout, Mounir, Malissin, Isabelle, Résière, Dabor, Haouache, Hakim, Brun, Pierre, Haik, William, Leprince, Pascal, Vicaut, Eric, Baud, Frédéric J
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Abstract Aim To evaluate the usefulness of routine laboratory parameters in the decision to treat refractory cardiac arrest patients with extracorporeal life support (ECLS). Methods Sixty-six adults with witnessed cardiac arrest of cardiac origin unrelated to poisoning or hypothermia undergoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation without return of spontaneous circulation (duration: 155 min [120–180], median, [25–75%-percentiles]) were included in a prospective cohort-study. ECLS was implemented under cardiac massage, using a centrifugal pump connected to a hollow-fiber membrane-oxygenator, aiming to maintain ECLS flow ≥2.5 l/min and mean arterial pressure ≥60 mm Hg. Results Forty-seven of 66 patients died within 24 h from multiorgan failure and massive capillary leak. Of 19/66 patients who survived ≥24 h with stable circulatory conditions permitting neurological evaluation, four became conscious and were transferred for further cardiac assistance, while three became organ donors. Ultimately, one patient survived without neurologic sequelae after cardiac transplantation. Using multivariate analysis, only pre-cannulation peripheral venous oxygen saturation (SpvO2 , 28% [15–52]) independently predicted inability to maintain targeted ECLS conditions ≥24 h (odds ratio for each 10%-decrease [95%-confidence interval]: 1.65 [1.21; 2.25], p = 0.002). The area under the receiver-operating-characteristics curve was 0.78 [0.63; 0.93]. SpvO2 cut-off value of 33% was associated with a sensitivity of 0.68 [0.50; 0.83] and specificity of 0.81 [0.54; 0.96]. SpvO2 ≤8%, lactate concentration ≥21 mmol/l, fibrinogen ≤0.8 g/l, and prothrombin index ≤11% predicted premature ECLS discontinuation with a specificity of 1. Conclusion SpvO2 is useful to predict the inability of maintaining refractory cardiac arrest victims on ECLS without detrimental capillary leak and multiorgan failure until neurological evaluation.
ISSN:0300-9572
1873-1570
DOI:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2011.05.007