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Rescue extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation in pediatric patients: a nine-year single-center experience in Zagreb,Croatia
Authors:Matija Bako&#x;  Toni Mati&#x;  Filip Rubi&#x;  Slobodan Gali&#x;  Miran Cvitkovi&#x;  Sandro Dessardo  Darko Ani&#x;  Draen Belina  Milivoj Novak
Institution:1.Department of Pediatrics, University Hospital Center Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia;2.Cardiothoracic Surgery Department University Hospital Center Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia 3.Department of Cardiac Surgery, University of Zagreb School of Medicine, University Hospital Center Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia
Abstract:AimTo investigate the risk factors and the outcomes of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in pediatric patients treated at the University Hospital Center Zagreb, the largest center in Croatia providing pediatric ECMO.MethodsThis retrospective study enrolled all the pediatric patients who required E-CPR from 2011 to 2019. Demographic data, cardiac anatomy, ECMO indications, ECMO complications, and neurodevelopmental status at hospital discharge were analyzed.ResultsIn the investigated period, E-CPR was used in 16 children, and the overall survival rate was 37.5%. Six patients were in the neonatal age group, 5 in the infant group, and 5 in the “older” group. There was no significant difference between the sexes. Four patients had an out-of-hospital arrest and 12 had an in-hospital arrest. Twelve out of 16 patients experienced renal failure and needed hemodialysis, with 4 out of 6 patients in the survivor group and 8 out of 10 in the non-survivor group. Survivors and non-survivors did not differ in E-CPR duration time, lactate levels before ECMO, time for lactate normalization, and pH levels before and after the start of ECMO.ConclusionThe similarity of our results to those obtained by other studies indicates that the ECMO program in our hospital should be maintained and improved.

The use of extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (E-CPR) is increasing (1). E-CPR is defined as an initiation of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) during active chest compressions. Its main goal is to provide immediate cardiovascular support to patients who do not react to CPR (2) and to lead to survival and a better neurological outcome (3). After administering CPR for more than 30 minutes, survival with conventional CPR measures ranges between 0%-5% (4,5).The most recent systematic review by the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation from 2015 recommended that E-CPR should be considered for children with underlying cardiac conditions who have an in-hospital cardiac arrest when appropriate protocols, expertise, and equipment are available (6). According to the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) registry from 2017 (7), more than 60 000 people received extracorporeal life support (ECLS), between 2009 and 2015, with an overall survival rate of 61% (7). Pediatric ECMO experience in Slovenia shows that ECMO programs may be incorporated in smaller hospitals in the region (8-10). The ELSO database includes data on all reported pediatric ECMO runs, including those conducted with E-CPR, and in patients with congenital heart surgery and neonates with diaphragmatic hernia or meconium aspiration syndrome, etc. During the 6-year period, 3005 E-CPR runs were reported, with an overall survival to hospital discharge of 43% (7). A survival rate of 31% was reported by Ergűn et al (11) and in E-CPR patients with severe burn injury (12). The longer the CPR duration time, the lower was the survival to discharge rate. Matos et al reported an E-CPR survival-to-discharge rate of 33% after >35 min of chest compressions (13). Other studies reported that the overall survival rate of pediatric E-CPR cases was growing, with better neurological outcomes than among the patients in the CPR group only (14). Pilar et al found that in 73 pediatric cardiac patients requiring cardiopulmonary resuscitation for >30 min (15), the survival to hospital discharge was 43.8%, with 3/4 of the patients having normal neurological function or mild neurological disability (15). Based on ELSO registry, approximately 10% of all ECMO patients meet brain death criteria (7). One of the biggest single-center studies, involving 184 pediatric ECPR patients (16), showed a successful ECMO weaning in 63% of the patients and the overall survival rate to hospital discharge of 43%. In the same study, the risk factors linked to increased mortality were presupport pH<7.1, mechanical complications, and neurological complications (16). The E-CPR use can involve many complications, not necessarily linked to factors preceding cardiac arrest, such as low cardiac output syndrome or irreversible respiratory failure (17). Furthermore, common complications of ECMO treatment are fluid overload and acute kidney injury (18). Many studies showed renal replacement therapy (RRT) to be negatively associated with survival (15,16,18,19).This study assessed the risk factors and the outcomes of ECMO in the largest Croatian center providing pediatric E-CPR experience over nine years and compared the survivor and the non-survivor group.
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