作者
Fausto Biancari,Alexander Kaserer,Andréa Perrotti,Vito Giovanni Ruggieri,Sung‐Min Cho,Jin Kook Kang,Magnus Dalén,Henryk Welp,Kristján Jónsson,Sigurður Ragnarsson,Francisco José Hernández Pérez,Giuseppe Gatti,Khalid Alkhamees,Antonio Loforte,Andrea Lechiancole,Stefano Rosato,Cristiano Spadaccio,Matteo Pettinari,Giovanni Mariscalco,Timo H. Mäkikallio,Sebastian D. Sahli,Camilla L’Acqua,Amr A. Arafat,Monirah A. Albabtain,Mohammed M AlBarak,Mohamed Laimoud,Ilija Djordjevic,Ihor Krasivskyi,Robertas Samalavičius,Lina Puodžiukaitė,Marta Alonso-Fernández-Gatta,Donat R. Spahn,Antonio Fiore
摘要
Introduction Postcardiotomy veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (V-A-ECMO) is associated with significant mortality. Identification of patients at very high risk for death is elusive and the decision to initiate V-A-ECMO is based on clinical judgment. The prognostic impact of pre-V-A-ECMO arterial lactate level in these critically ill patients has been herein evaluated. Methods A systematic review was conducted to identify studies on postcardiotomy VA-ECMO for the present individual patient data meta-analysis. Results Overall, 1269 patients selected from 10 studies were included in this analysis. Arterial lactate level at V-A-ECMO initiation was increased in patients who died during the index hospitalization compared to those who survived (9.3 vs 6.6 mmol/L, p < 0.0001). Accordingly, in hospital mortality increased along quintiles of pre-V-A-ECMO arterial lactate level (quintiles: 1, 54.9%; 2, 54.9%; 3, 67.3%; 4, 74.2%; 5, 82.2%, p < 0.0001). The best cut-off for arterial lactate was 6.8 mmol/L (in-hospital mortality, 76.7% vs. 55.7%, p < 0.0001). Multivariable multilevel mixed-effect logistic regression model including arterial lactate level significantly increased the area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (0.731, 95% CI 0.702–0.760 vs 0.679, 95% CI 0.648–0.711, DeLong test p < 0.0001). Classification and regression tree analysis showed the in-hospital mortality was 85.2% in patients aged more than 70 years with pre-V-A-ECMO arterial lactate level ≥6.8 mmol/L. Conclusions Among patients requiring postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO, hyperlactatemia was associated with a marked increase of in-hospital mortality. Arterial lactate may be useful in guiding the decision-making process and the timing of initiation of postcardiotomy V-A-ECMO.