McCloskey Colin G, Hatton Kevin W, Furfaro David, Engoren Milo
Harrington Heart and Vascular Institute, Department of Emergency Medicine, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, Cleveland, OH.
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Kentucky Health Care, Lexington, KY.
Crit Care Med. 2025 Mar 1;53(3):e567-e574. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000006547. Epub 2024 Dec 17.
To determine the relationship between all-cause hospital mortality and morbidity in patients treated with venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) and to assess whether this relationship is mediated via body mass index (BMI).
Using the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) registry, venoarterial ECMO runs from 2015 to 2021 were retrospectively analyzed. Patient demographics, ECMO indications, and complications for survivors and decedents were univariately compared. Logistic regression with fractional polynomials was used to estimate the relationship between BMI and both mortality and complications in venoarterial ECMO patients.
Contributing centers to the ELSO ECMO registry.
Patients that underwent venoarterial ECMO at an ELSO contributing ECMO center.
None.
Twenty-two thousand eight hundred twenty-five venoarterial ECMO runs met inclusion criteria for analysis. The mean BMI for survivors was 28.4 ± 6.5 vs. 29.5 ± 6.9 kg/m 2 for decedents. BMI was significantly associated with mortality ( p < 0.001), with the proportion of patients dying increasing with increasing BMI: 47% of underweight patients died, increasing to 50% for the normal range, to 53%, 56%, 58%, and 65% for preobese, class 1, class 2, and class 3 obese patients, respectively. Relative to a BMI of 25, a BMI of 35 had an odds ratio (OR) of death of 1.15 (1.09-1.18), and a BMI of 45 an OR of 1.46 (1.25-1.57). BMI was significantly associated with increased mechanical and renal complications, but decreased pulmonary complications.
In patients undergoing venoarterial ECMO, increasing BMI was associated with increasing all-cause mortality and mechanical and renal complications.
确定接受静脉-动脉体外膜肺氧合(ECMO)治疗的患者全因医院死亡率与发病率之间的关系,并评估这种关系是否通过体重指数(BMI)介导。
利用体外生命支持组织(ELSO)登记处的数据,对2015年至2021年期间的静脉-动脉ECMO治疗进行回顾性分析。对幸存者和死亡者的患者人口统计学、ECMO适应症及并发症进行单因素比较。采用含分数多项式的逻辑回归来估计BMI与静脉-动脉ECMO患者死亡率及并发症之间的关系。
ELSO ECMO登记处的参与中心。
在ELSO参与ECMO中心接受静脉-动脉ECMO治疗的患者。
无。
22825例静脉-动脉ECMO治疗符合分析纳入标准。幸存者的平均BMI为28.4±6.5,而死亡者为29.5±6.9kg/m²。BMI与死亡率显著相关(p<0.001),随着BMI升高,死亡患者比例增加:体重过轻患者的死亡率为47%,正常范围患者升至50%,超重前期、1级、2级和3级肥胖患者分别为53%、56%、58%和65%。相对于BMI为25,BMI为35时的死亡比值比(OR)为1.15(1.09-1.18),BMI为45时的OR为1.46(1.25-1.57)。BMI与机械和肾脏并发症增加显著相关,但与肺部并发症减少相关。
在接受静脉-动脉ECMO治疗的患者中,BMI升高与全因死亡率以及机械和肾脏并发症增加相关。