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Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is a temporary mechanical circulatory support device for cardiogenic shock (CS) patients. During ECMO support, renal replacement therapy (RRT) facilitate more rapid metabolic or uremic control and more effective prevention and management of fluid overload which happened in critical state. CS patients who are likely to receive ECMO support will be enrolled and randomized with a 1:1 allocation to a simultaneous RRT arm vs. standard care arm.
The primary outcome is all-cause 30-day mortality after ECMO is commenced
Full description
Background:
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is a temporary mechanical circulatory support device for cardiogenic shock (CS) patients. Patients with fluid overload (FO) and sever metabolic disorder in the early phase of ECMO support exhibit higher hospital mortality. Simultaneous renal replacement therapy (RRT) is routinely used to facilitate more rapid metabolic or uremic control and more effective prevention and management of fluid overload when ECMO is commenced in some ECMO centers registered in the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO). However, high-quality evidence to support the strategy of simultaneous RRT during ECMO support is currently lacking. The investigators aim to perform a single center, randomized, controlled trial to evaluate the impact of simultaneous RRT on outcomes during ECMO support for CS patients.
Hypotheses:
The investigators hypothesize that simultaneous RRT with ECMO will improve survival, reduce morbidity, and shorten duration on ECMO support, duration on invasive ventilation, total days of ICU stay and hospitalization, and time to recovery from electrolyte disturbance.
Design:
Prospective, single-center, randomized, open-label trial comparing simultaneous RRT and standard care strategies in terms of overall survival.
CS patients who are likely to receive ECMO support will be enrolled and randomized with a 1:1 allocation to a simultaneous RRT arm vs. standard care arm.
Primary outcome:
All-cause 30-day mortality after ECMO is commenced.
Secondary outcomes:
Morbidity (acute kidney injury, infection), duration on ECMO support, duration on invasive ventilation, total days of ICU stay and hospitalization, and time to recovery from electrolyte disturbance.
Number of subjects required:
The baseline hospital mortality (66%) of CS patients with ECMO support was obtained from the investigators' previous study. Based on their literature research, early initiation of RRT could reduce the mortality by 18%. Assuming all-cause 30-day mortalities in the control and intervention groups of 66% and 48%, respectively, with a two-sided significance of 0.05 and a power of 0.8, a total of 262 patients (131 for each arm) will be required, including an estimated dropout rate of 10%.
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262 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Xiaotong Hou, PhD., Md.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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