Title

Anticoagulation-free VV ECMO for Acute Respiratory Failure
Anticoagulation-free VV ECMO for Acute Respiratory Failure: A Pilot Safety and Feasibility Randomized Clinical Trial
  • Phase

    Phase 2/Phase 3
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Recruiting
  • Study Participants

    40
Currently international experts recommend therapeutic anticoagulation for veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO). Reports and case series suggest that the absence of therapeutic anticoagulation is safe for VV-ECMO. No randomized control trials have assessed this. The aim of this pilot study is to assess safety and feasibility of an "anticoagulation-free strategy" for veno-venous ECMO (VV-ECMO) in Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).
Although anticoagulation targets and monitoring strategies vary around the world, the current practice is still to anticoagulate patients on ECMO, mostly with UFH. However, the use of heparin coated circuits has changed their thrombogenicity. Preliminary data suggest that a low-dose unfractionated heparin (UFH) strategy is non-inferior to a therapeutic dose UFH. Indeed, in daily practice, when a patient on ECMO has severe bleeding complications, UFH is often stopped until the hemorrhagic issue is under control, sometimes for days. This has led some to hypothesize that anticoagulation might not be necessary for VV-ECMO, and a few case series report little to no increase in adverse events as a result. There are currently no randomized controlled trials comparing anticoagulation to no anticoagulation for patients supported with ECMO. Anticoagulation is, for physiological reasons, less necessary during VV-ECMO than VA-ECMO and this is the reason why our pilot study will focus on VV-ECMO only. Whereas the whole ECMO device is identical for both configurations, the risk of systemic embolization (e.g., stroke) and its severe complications is much higher in VA-ECMO where blood is reinjected directly into the systemic arterial system. Moreover, in the presence of severely decreased left ventricular function requiring VA-ECMO, the risk of left ventricular thrombus is very high and requires anticoagulation. During VV-ECMO, the risk of systemic embolization is low because the whole circuit is on the right side of the heart and relatively preserved biventricular function is needed to perform VV-ECMO

The hypothesis is that VV-ECMO is safe and feasible without therapeutic anticoagulation for adults with ARDS.

The objectives of this study is to assess, through a pilot study, the safety and feasibility of an "anticoagulation free strategy" for veno-venous ECMO (VV-ECMO) in acute respiratory failure
Study Started
Sep 01
2022
Anticipated
Primary Completion
Dec 31
2023
Anticipated
Study Completion
Jun 30
2024
Anticipated
Last Update
Aug 24
2022

Drug Subcutaneous Heparin

The intervention group will receive prophylactic heparin instead of standard of care therapeutic intravenous heparin

  • Other names: Enoxaparin or unfractionated heparin

No anticoagulation Experimental

Participants in this arm will not receive unfractionated heparin during the course of ECMO. They will receive standard venous thromboembolism prophylaxis with subcutaneous enoxaparin or unfractionated heparin

Anticoagulation, ECMO standard of care No Intervention

Participants in this arm will receive the standard of care anticoagulation with unfractionated heparin during the course of ECMO.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Adult patient with ARDS on VV-ECMO

Exclusion Criteria:

Contraindication to anticoagulation with UFH (known heparin-induced thrombocytopenia, active hemorrhage, any surgery precluding the use of anticoagulation),
Indication for therapeutic anticoagulation (pulmonary embolism or deep vein thrombosis, chronic anticoagulation therapy before ECMO insertion)
Low-flow (<2 liters/min) VV-ECMO (ECCO2R)
No Results Posted