Annals of
Intensive Care volume 15,
Article number: 151 (2025) Published: 06 October 2025
Background
Approximately half of the patients with acute respiratory
distress syndrome (ARDS) receiving extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO)
remain ECMO-dependent beyond 14 days after ECMO initiation. The
identification of factors associated with mortality during an ECMO run may
update prognostic assessment and focus clinical interventions.
Methods
In this observational study, data from 1137 patients with
COVID-19 ARDS receiving ECMO support in 29 German centers between January 1st
2020 and July 31st 2021 were analyzed. Multivariable stepwise logistic
regression analyses were performed to build survival prediction models with
day-by-day data during the first 14 days of an ECMO run. The primary
endpoint was all-cause mortality in the intensive care unit.
Results
Mortality in this cohort was high (75%). Patients who
remained ECMO-dependent on day 14 of their ECMO run showed comparable mortality
to all patients receiving ECMO support on day 1. Yet, factors associated with
mortality changed during the first 14 days of ECMO support. On day 1 of
ECMO support, only patient age and lactate remained in the final mortality
prediction model. On day 14 of an ECMO run, tidal volume was independently
associated with mortality (adjusted Odds Ratio 0.693 (95%CI 0.564–0.851), p < 0.001 for 1 mL/kg increase in tidal volume per
predicted body weight). The adjusted mortality for patients with a tidal volume
below 2 mL/kg on day 14 of their ECMO run was above 80% (lower limit of
the 95%CI interval). Higher tidal volume was mainly based on higher respiratory
system compliance. Yet, the benefit of higher compliance was not observed in
some patients who were still ventilated with very low driving pressures despite
remaining ECMO-dependent on day 14 of ECMO support.
Conclusions
Mortality predictors change during the course of an ECMO
run. In a cohort with high mortality, on day 14 of ECMO support for ARDS, tidal
volume may be an independent predictor of mortality. Further analyses on
ventilation strategies in patients who remain ECMO-dependent are needed.
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