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A pragmatic randomised controlled trial to determine whether early Veno-Venous Extracorporeal Carbon Dioxide Removal (VV-ECCO2R) in mechanically ventilated patients with acute exacerbated Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease decreases the days of invasive mechanical ventilation.
Full description
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a major worldwide health burden. Currently, it is the fourth leading cause of death worldwide, and is the only leading cause of death that is rising, and will likely become the third cause of death by 2020. COPD is characterized by progressive destruction in the elastic tissue within the lung, causing respiratory failure.
Patients with COPD may experience acute exacerbations with severe hypercapnic respiratory failure. Hypercapnia results from acute worsening of expiratory flow limitation caused by the increased small airway resistance with consequent development of dynamic alveolar hyperinflation and intrinsic positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). In the most severe cases, these may be refractory to conventional therapies and mechanical ventilation, becoming life-threatening.
Extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (ECCO2R) represents an attractive approach in this setting. The last decade has seen an increasing interest in the provision of extracorporeal support for respiratory failure, as demonstrated by the progressively increasing number of scientific publications on this topic. In particular, remarkable interest has been focused on extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (ECCO2R), due to the relative ease and efficiency in blood CO2 clearance granted by extracorporeal gas exchangers as compared to oxygen delivery.
In recent years, a new generation of ECCO2R devices has been developed. More efficient veno-venous (VV)-ECCO2R devices have become available and have replaced the arterio-venous approach, having the advantage of not requiring arterial puncture.
The new VV-ECCO2R devices offer lower resistance to blood flow, have smaller priming volumes, and provide a much more efficient gas exchange with relatively low extracorporeal blood flows (0.4-1 L/min). The technology of these devices is now comparable to that of renal dialysis and has been experimented in several animal and human studies, demonstrating a significant reduction in arterial CO2 and improvement in the work of breathing.
In summary, minimally invasive ECCO2R appears very promising for patients with acute exacerbation of obstructive diseases refractory to conventional treatment, but systematic evaluation is needed to prove its clinical efficacy.
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Inclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria
NIV for at least 2 hours and no more than 24 hours with signs of respiratory distress (respiratory rate > 30 breaths/min and use of accessory muscles or paradoxical abdominal movements) AND
PaCO2> 55 mmHg and pH < 7.25 or pH < 7.30 and PaCO2 > 55 mmHg, with PaCO2 decrease < 20% from baseline
• Known or suspected aeCOPD patients where NIV is contraindicated and need immediate invasive mechanical ventilation due to:
Respiratory arrest
Inability to protect the airway (impaired cough or swallowing or massive aspiration or respiratory pauses with loss of consciousness or gasping of air)
Inability to clear secretions
Agitated and confused patients
Facial deformities or conditions that prevent mask from fitting
Uncooperative or unmotivated patients
Exclusion criteria
Participation in other interventional studies
Patients already included in this study that need a new readmission because of a new aeCOPD episode
aeCOPD intubated > 12 hours
Extubation within the previous 48 hours following intubation and invasive mechanical ventilation due to any cause
Anatomical abnormalities or vascular diseases preventing the correct insertion of the ECCO2R cannula
PaO2 to FiO2 ratio < 150 on PEEP ≥ 5 cmH2O
Known or suspected pregnancy (women of childbearing potential require a pregnancy test)
Hemodynamic instability defined as
Acute multiple organ failure defined as more than two organ failures assessed by SOFA score. Organ dysfunction can be identified as an acute change in total SOFA score > 2 points
Decompensated heart failure defined as an exacerbation of symptoms or signs after a period of relative stability such as dyspnea, fatigue or edema in the setting of previously established myocardial dysfunction (systolic or diastolic)32 and B-natriuretic peptide more than100 ng/L.
Tracheostomized patients
Untreated pulmonary embolism, pleural effusion, pneumothorax or bronchopleural fistula as the primary cause of acute respiratory failure
Hemoglobin < 7 gr/dL that require daily transfusion to maintain hemoglobin above 7 gr/dL at the time of screening
Active major bleeding defined as35:
Recent major surgery in the last 2 weeks
Platelet count < 50 000/mm3
Prothrombin time-international normalized ratio (INR) > 1.5 in the absence of anticoagulation therapy
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) or known paradoxical/allergic reactions to heparin
History within the previous 3 months of stroke or severe head trauma or intracranial arterio-venous malformation, or cerebral aneurysm, or central nervous mass lesion or intracranial bleeding
Epidural catheter in place or plan to insert an epidural catheter during the study
Gastrointestinal bleeding within the 6 weeks prior to study entry
Severe liver insufficiency (Child-Pugh scores >7) or INR > 1.6 suspected to be related to liver disease (liver associated coagulopathy)
Presence of severe (acute or chronic) renal failure defined as requiring any form of dialysis (including CRRT and CVVH) and/or having a serum creatinine > 2.5 mg/dL and urine clearance < 20 mL/hour
Inability to receive blood products
History of complications from extracorporeal support
Permanent home ventilation except for sleep-disordered breathing
Significant weakness or paralysis of respiratory muscles due to causes unrelated to aeCOPD
Recent (< 7 days) prolonged (> 24 hours) use of muscle paralyzing agents
Immunocompromised state defined as
Patients not expected to survive 6 months on the basis of premorbid health status
History of uncontrolled, major psychiatric disorder
Therapeutic restriction (DNR), moribund patient or not expected to survive current hospitalization
Consent declined
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
90 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Luis Morales, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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