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Emergency Total ECLS vs Standard ACLS With ECMO Bailout for Survival in Refractory OHCA (ECLS-OHCA)

T

Taipei Medical University

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest (OHCA)

Treatments

Procedure: extracorporeal life support
Procedure: standard ACLS

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06692075
N202312122

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of the clinical trial is to learn if early extracorporeal life support ( ECLS ) will save more out-of-hospital cardiac arrest ( OHCA ) patients with good neurological outcome. It will also learn if emergency ECLS is safe in the OHCA rescue. Researchers aim to investigate if emergency total ECLS is better than standard advanced cardiac life support ( ACLS ) first, followed by bailout ECMO if required, for survival with favorable neurological outcome in OHCA patients. Participants meeting criteria of OHCA with witness, bystander CPR, shockable initial rhythm with repeated defibrillation, and transport time less than 30 min will be compared between total ECLS versus standard ACLS first with bailout ECMO protocols. All participants will receive emergency interventional coronary revascularization , intensive care unit therapy , cardiac ward care and up to 180 days of clinical follow up after survival .

Full description

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest ( OHCA ) is a highly lethal emergency, unless return of spontaneous circulation ( ROSC ) is timely achieved by efficient and effective resuscitation. Nevertheless, despite advanced cardiopulmonary resuscitation ( CPR ) with mechanical chest compression, assisted ventilation and automatic external defibrillation, the survival of OHCA patients remains below 10%. Extracorporeal membranous oxygenation ( ECMO ) facilitated life support ( ECLS ) could help hemodynamic stability and improve significantly the survival of refractory OHCA to 25-40 %. On the other hand, the precise role and timing of the ECLS during the emergency management of OHCA remains largely unestablished.

In the present study, we hypothesized that emergency total ECLS is superior to standard ACLS with ECMO bailout for survival with favorable neurological outcome in refractory out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. All OHCA patients meeting the including criteria, i.e. age 18-75 years, witnessed cardiac arrest with bystander CPR, initial shockable rhythm as ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia ( VF/pVT ), repeated defibrillation shocks and escorted transportation within 30 minutes from 119 call to arriving emergency department ( ED ) in the hospital would be recruited. Eligible patients will be consecutively randomized at ED in 1:1 ratio, stratified by hospitals, into emergency total ECLS group and standard ACLS with ECMO bailout group. Informed consent is waived in the life-threatening emergency condition. For emergency total ECLS group, OHCA patients will receive early implantation and initiation of ECMO circulation within 15 minutes after randomization or up to 45 minutes after 119 call. For standard ACLS with ECMO bailout group, OHCA patients will receive standard ACLS for at least 45 minutes after collapse or 119 call or at least 15 minutes after ED arrival before calling for bailout ECMO if required. Following return of spontaneous systemic circulation (ROSC) or depending on ECMO circulation, both groups would be transferred to brain and chest computer tomography screening, emergency coronary revascularization intervention and subsequent intensive cardiac care with targeted hypothermia management. Survivals will be treated with guideline directed medical therapy for reduced ejection fraction heart failure and/or implantable cardioverter-defibrillator implantation for prevention of recurrent VT/VF in wards. All survivals will be followed up for medical and neurological status at 30 days, 90 days and 180 days after discharge.

Primary endpoint is survival with favorable neurological outcome at 30 days. Secondary endpoints are survival to discharge with favorable neurological outcome, survival with favorable neurological outcome at 180 days, total duration of cardiopulmonary resuscitation ( CPR ), total duration of mechanical ventilation, total duration of intensive care unit stay, total duration of hospitalization. Safety endpoints will be incidence of serious adverse events related to prolonged CPR, prolonged ischemia, and ECMO systemic perfusion and coronary reperfusion.

The number of subjects to be enrolled according to the primary endpoint of 30 days survival with favorable neurological outcome. With a power of 80%, accepting the level of statistical significance at alpha= 0.05 and based on two-sided Chi-Square test, we estimated 166 participants per arm are needed. This is based on the 30% success rate and 15% success rate of 30-day survival with good neurological outcome of emergency total ECLS intervention and standard ACLS with bailout ECMO (if required) intervention, according to previous trials, plus a 10% drop out rate. Based on two-tailed test, p less than 0.05 is considered statistical significance. If interim analysis is deemed necessary, the significance level will be adjusted accordingly using Bonferroni method. Because of no interim analysis and no stopping point in ITT protocol, there is no criteria for premature termination of the trial. The missing data of the primary and secondary efficacy outcomes will be considered as failure for ITT analysis. Last observations carry forward method will be adapted for the missing data of repeated measurements. The data record will be monitored and audited by the Institutional Review Board of the TMU Shuangho hospital as well as the Data and Safety Monitoring Plan committee.

Enrollment

332 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. adults aged 18-75 years old
  2. witnessed cardiac arrest with bystander CPR
  3. initial shockable rhythm as ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia ( VF/pVT )
  4. repeated defibrillation shocks ( more than 2 ) by external defibrillator
  5. estimated transportation time from 119 call to arrival at emergency service less than 30 minutes.

Exclusion criteria

  1. age less than 18 years or more than 75 years old
  2. non-shockable initial rhythm, i.e. pulseless electrical activity or asystole
  3. acute aortic dissection
  4. acute massive pulmonary embolism
  5. intracerebral hemorrhage
  6. major trauma due to blunt, penetrating or burn injury
  7. severe peripheral artery occlusion disease
  8. known pregnancy
  9. suicide, illicit drug overdose or intoxication
  10. known pre-arrest modified Rankin score ( mRS ) more than 3 or cerebral performance category scale ( CPC ) more than 2
  11. severe concomitant malignancy with expected life expectancy less than 1 year
  12. signed and effective do-not-resuscitation ( DNR ) order
  13. absolute contraindications to emergency coronary angiography, including known anaphylactic reaction to angiographic contrast media, acute gastrointestinal bleeding or internal bleeding.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

332 participants in 2 patient groups

Total ECLS in refractory OHCA
Active Comparator group
Description:
Emergency total extracorporeal life support ( ECLS ) in cardiopulmonary resuscitation of OHCA patients with refractory ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia
Treatment:
Procedure: extracorporeal life support
standard ACLS in refractory OHCA
Active Comparator group
Description:
Emergency standard advanced cardiac life support ( ACLS ) in cardiopulmonary resuscitation of OHCA patients with refractory ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia. Bailout ECMO allowed after at least 45 minutes of CPR since collapse and 119 call or at least 15 minutes since arrival at emergency department
Treatment:
Procedure: standard ACLS

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jiunn-Lee Lin, MD, PHD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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