Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Pneumocystis Pneumonia: Outcomes in Patients From the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization.
Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP) can cause severe hypoxemic respiratory failure in immunocompromised patients. Contemporary outcomes of venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV ECMO) support for PCP are poorly characterized, and existing reports are limited to small case series.
Retrospective cohort study.
International registry study using the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) registry.
Adults with PCP-associated hypoxemic respiratory failure supported with VV ECMO between 2011 and 2024.
VV ECMO.
A total of 209 patients with PCP-associated respiratory failure supported with VV ECMO were identified. The overall in-hospital mortality was 60.8%. Survivors were younger than nonsurvivors (median age 41.9 vs. 46.8 yr; p = 0.047). Duration of mechanical ventilation before VV ECMO was longer among nonsurvivors (median 4.7 vs. 1.6 d; p = 0.019). The proportion of patients with HIV infection was similar among survivors and nonsurvivors (19.5% vs. 22.1%; p = 0.73). Pre-ECMO vasopressor use, prone positioning, and renal replacement therapy were common and did not differ between groups. Clinical course was characterized by prolonged VV ECMO support (median 18.6 d) and frequent complications, including pneumothorax (21.1%), renal replacement therapy during VV ECMO (31.6%), intracranial hemorrhage or stroke (7.7%), and major pulmonary or gastrointestinal hemorrhage (16.8%). PCP accounted for a small proportion of VV ECMO runs reported to the ELSO registry throughout the study period at 0.36% of reported cases. No significant temporal trend in mortality was observed.
PCP-associated respiratory failure supported with VV ECMO is associated with substantial mortality and prolonged VV ECMO support. These findings provide contemporary benchmarks that may inform VV ECMO candidacy discussions and expectations in this challenging patient population.
Retrospective cohort study.
International registry study using the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) registry.
Adults with PCP-associated hypoxemic respiratory failure supported with VV ECMO between 2011 and 2024.
VV ECMO.
A total of 209 patients with PCP-associated respiratory failure supported with VV ECMO were identified. The overall in-hospital mortality was 60.8%. Survivors were younger than nonsurvivors (median age 41.9 vs. 46.8 yr; p = 0.047). Duration of mechanical ventilation before VV ECMO was longer among nonsurvivors (median 4.7 vs. 1.6 d; p = 0.019). The proportion of patients with HIV infection was similar among survivors and nonsurvivors (19.5% vs. 22.1%; p = 0.73). Pre-ECMO vasopressor use, prone positioning, and renal replacement therapy were common and did not differ between groups. Clinical course was characterized by prolonged VV ECMO support (median 18.6 d) and frequent complications, including pneumothorax (21.1%), renal replacement therapy during VV ECMO (31.6%), intracranial hemorrhage or stroke (7.7%), and major pulmonary or gastrointestinal hemorrhage (16.8%). PCP accounted for a small proportion of VV ECMO runs reported to the ELSO registry throughout the study period at 0.36% of reported cases. No significant temporal trend in mortality was observed.
PCP-associated respiratory failure supported with VV ECMO is associated with substantial mortality and prolonged VV ECMO support. These findings provide contemporary benchmarks that may inform VV ECMO candidacy discussions and expectations in this challenging patient population.
Authors
Henry Henry, Thompson Thompson, Ham Ham, Vikram Vikram, Cartin-Ceba Cartin-Ceba, Khattar Khattar, D'Cunha D'Cunha, Limper Limper, Sen Sen, Patel Patel, Pulsipher Pulsipher
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