by Christopher Jer
Wei Low, Ryan Ruiyang Ling, Kollengode Ramanathan, Ying Chen, Bram Rochwerg,
Tetsuhisa Kitamura, Taku Iwami, Marcus Eng Hock Ong and Yohei Okada
Critical Care volume 28,
Article number: 57 (2024) Published: 21
February 2024
Background
Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) may
reduce mortality and improve neurological outcomes in patients with cardiac
arrest. We updated our existing meta-analysis and trial sequential analysis to
further evaluate ECPR compared to conventional CPR (CCPR).
Methods
We searched three international databases from 1 January
2000 through 1 November 2023, for randomised controlled trials or propensity
score matched studies (PSMs) comparing ECPR to CCPR in both out-of-hospital
cardiac arrest (OHCA) and in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA). We conducted an
updated random-effects meta-analysis, with the primary outcome being
in-hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included short- and long-term
favourable neurological outcome and survival (30 days–1 year). We also
conducted a trial sequential analysis to evaluate the required information size
in the meta-analysis to detect a clinically relevant reduction in mortality.
Results
We included 13 studies with 14 pairwise comparisons (6336
ECPR and 7712 CCPR) in our updated meta-analysis. ECPR was associated with
greater precision in reducing overall in-hospital mortality (OR 0.63, 95% CI
0.50–0.79, high certainty), to which the trial sequential analysis was
concordant. The addition of recent studies revealed a newly significant
decrease in mortality in OHCA (OR 0.62, 95% CI 0.45–0.84). Re-analysis of
relevant secondary outcomes reaffirmed our initial findings of favourable
short-term neurological outcomes and survival up to 30 days. Estimates for
long-term neurological outcome and 90-day–1-year survival remained unchanged.
Conclusions
We found that ECPR reduces in-hospital mortality, improves
neurological outcome, and 30-day survival. We additionally found a newly
significant benefit in OHCA, suggesting that ECPR may be considered in both
IHCA and OHCA.
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