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Clinical Trials/NCT03981393
NCT03981393
Completed
Not Applicable

Cardinality Matching Study of Early v.s. Delayed VV ECMO in Severe Respiratory Failure

University of Cambridge0 sites667 target enrollmentDecember 1, 2011

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Acute Respiratory Failure
Sponsor
University of Cambridge
Enrollment
667
Primary Endpoint
Survival to ECMO ICU discharge
Status
Completed
Last Updated
5 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Clinical reasoning and recent data suggest that early use of venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in refractory respiratory failure may confer a survival advantage.

This retrospective matched study will assess whether patients who received VV ECMO at less severe hypoxaemia had differing outcomes to those who received ECMO with very severe hypoxaemia.

Detailed Description

VV ECMO is increasingly used in refractory respiratory failure. Despite advances in lung protective ventilation strategies, patients who have severe respiratory failure often develop complications from mechanical ventilation, including volutrauma and barotrauma. ECMO allows gas exchange to occur extracorporeally and may reduce the potential burden of iatrogenic lung injury by allowing a reduction of volume and pressure support - a 'lung rest' strategy. It is theorised that earlier intitiation of ECMO may allow for better outcomes, as there will have been less time for iatrogenic lung injury to occur. The UK ECMO registry has been collected of patients treated under the NHS England commissioned respiratory ECMO service since 2011. This study has been previously registered and publication is intended shortly. Patients will be extracted from this registry if they received VV ECMO. Propensity matching scores will be created and patients will be stratified into groups of 'early' vs 'delayed' ECMO, based on their probability of being in either group. Patients will be divided into cohorts based on the median PaO2/FiO2 ratio at decision to cannulate ('less severe hypoxaemia') and ('very severe hypoxaemia'). Matched cohorts will be created correcting for key confounding factors (age, primary diagnosis, duration of pre-ECMO ventilation and PaCO2), using cardinality matching (a novel technique described by Zubizaretta et al. in 2014) and traditional propensity-score-based methods. The technique with greater balance and statistical power (as defined by sample size) will be selected for the primary analysis. Further analyses will assess the relationship between hypoxaemia at decision-to-cannulate and confounding factors as above.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
December 1, 2011
End Date
March 31, 2018
Last Updated
5 years ago
Study Type
Observational
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Alex Warren

Academic Foundation Doctor

University of Cambridge

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Patients included in the UK ECMO registry (see previous registration; NCT number awaited; protocol ECMO-001)
  • Patients with VV ECMO

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients with inadequate or missing data for creation of propensity score models.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Survival to ECMO ICU discharge

Time Frame: Up to 90 days.

Percentage of patients alive at discharge from the ICU at the specialist ECMO centre

Secondary Outcomes

  • Duration of ECMO treatment(Up to 90 days.)

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