Impact of Prone Position in COVID-19 Patients on Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation*
by Massart,
Nicolas; Guervilly, Christophe; Mansour, Alexandre; Porto, Alizée; Flécher,
Erwan; Esvan, Maxime; Fougerou, Claire; Fillâtre, Pierre; Duburcq, Thibault;
Lebreton, Guillaume; Para, Marylou; Stephan, François; Hraiech, Sami; Ross,
James T.; Schmidt, Matthieu; Vincentelli, André; Nesseler, Nicolas; for the
Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Respiratory Failure and/or Heart
failure related to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (ECMOSARS)
Investigators
Critical Care Medicine 51(1):p
36-46, January 2023
OBJECTIVES:
Prone positioning and venovenous extracorporeal membrane
oxygenation (ECMO) are both useful interventions in acute respiratory distress
syndrome (ARDS). Combining the two therapies is feasible and safe, but the
effectiveness is not known. Our objective was to evaluate the potential
survival benefit of prone positioning in venovenous ECMO patients cannulated
for COVID-19–related ARDS.
DESIGN:
Retrospective analysis of a multicenter cohort.
PATIENTS:
Patients on venovenous ECMO who tested positive for severe
acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 by reverse transcriptase polymerase
chain reaction or with a diagnosis on chest CT were eligible.
INTERVENTIONS:
None.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:
All patients on venovenous ECMO for respiratory failure in
whom prone position status while on ECMO and in-hospital mortality
were known were included. Of 647 patients in 41 centers, 517 were included.
Median age was 55 (47–61), 78% were male and 95% were proned before
cannulation. After cannulation, 364 patients (70%) were proned and 153 (30%)
remained in the supine position for the whole ECMO run. There were 194 (53%)
and 92 (60%) deaths in the prone and the supine groups, respectively. Prone
position on ECMO was independently associated with lower in-hospital
mortality (odds ratio = 0.49 [0.29–0.84]; p = 0.010). In 153
propensity score-matched pairs, mortality rate was 49.7% in the prone
position group versus 60.1% in the supine position group (p = 0.085).
Considering only patients alive at decannulation, propensity-matched proned
patients had a significantly lower mortality rate (22.4% vs 37.8%; p =
0.029) than nonproned patients.
CONCLUSIONS:
Prone position may be beneficial in patients supported
by venovenous ECMO for COVID-19–related ARDS but more data are needed to draw
definitive conclusions.
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