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Evaluation of clinical outcomes in patients treated with heparin or direct thrombin inhibitors during extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Authors :
M’Pembele, René
Roth, Sebastian
Metzger, Aljoscha
Nucaro, Anthony
Stroda, Alexandra
Polzin, Amin
Hollmann, Markus W.
Lurati Buse, Giovanna
Huhn, Ragnar
Anesthesiology
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
APH - Quality of Care
APH - Global Health
ACS - Microcirculation
Source :
Thrombosis journal, 20(1):42. BioMed Central
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundThe number of patients treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) devices is increasing. Anticoagulation therapy is crucial to prevent thrombosis during ECMO therapy. Predominantly, heparin has been used as primary anticoagulant but direct thrombin inhibitors (DTI) have been established as alternatives. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate clinical outcomes in patients treated with heparin compared to different DTI during ECMO.MethodsA systematic search was conducted. Full scientific articles were sought for inclusion if heparin anticoagulation was compared to DTI (argatroban/bivalirudin) in ECMO patients. Risk of bias was assessed by Newcastle Ottawa scale. Primary endpoint was in-hospital mortality. Bleeding events, thrombotic events, hours of ECMO support, days of hospital stay, percentage of time within therapeutic range and time to therapeutic range were extracted from full texts as secondary endpoints. Results were presented as Forrest-plots. GRADE was used for confidence assessment in outcomes.ResultsSystematic search identified 4.385 records, thereof 18 retrospective studies for a total of 1942 patients, complied with the predefined eligibility criteria:15 studies investigated bivalirudin and 3 studies investigated argatroban versus heparin. Risk of bias was high for most studies. In-hospital mortality, major bleeding events and pump-related thrombosis were less frequent in DTI group as compared to heparin [mortality—OR 0.69, 95% CI 0.54–0.86; major bleeding—OR 0.48, 95% CI 0.29–0.81; pump thrombosis—OR 0.55, 95% CI 0.40–0.76]. Additionally, percentage of time within therapeutic range was higher for DTI [SMD 0.54, 95% CI 0.14–0.94]. GRADE approach revealed a very low level of certainty for each outcome.ConclusionIn this meta-analysis, DTI and especially bivalirudin showed beneficial effects on clinical outcomes in ECMO patients as compared to heparin.However, due to the lack of randomized trials, certainty of evidence is low.Trial RegistrationThis systematic review and meta-analysis was prospectively registered at PROSPERO data base (reference numberCRD42021237252).Graphical Abstract

Details

ISSN :
14779560
Volume :
20
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Thrombosis journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d306e27e150e0f67b59abf570fe880c9