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End-Tidal to Arterial Pco 2 Ratio as Guide to Weaning from Venovenous Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation.

Stefano LazzariFederica RomittiMattia BusanaFrancesco VassalliMatteo BonifaziMatteo Maria MacríLorenzo GiosaFrancesca CollinoDaniel HeiseMartin GolinskiSimone GattarelloLars-Olav HarnischSerena BrusatoriRoberta MajCarmelo ZinnatoKonrad MeissnerMichael QuintelOnnen MoererJohn J MariniBarnaby SandersonLuigi CamporotaLuciano Gattinoni
Published in: American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine (2022)
Rationale: Weaning from venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO) is based on oxygenation and not on carbon dioxide elimination. Objectives: To predict readiness to wean from VV-ECMO. Methods: In this multicenter study of mechanically ventilated adults with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome receiving VV-ECMO, we investigated a variable based on CO 2 elimination. The study included a prospective interventional study of a physiological cohort ( n  = 26) and a retrospective clinical cohort ( n  = 638). Measurements and Main Results: Weaning failure in the clinical and physiological cohorts were 37% and 42%, respectively. The main cause of failure in the physiological cohort was high inspiratory effort or respiratory rate. All patients exhaled similar amounts of CO 2 , but in patients who failed the weaning trial, [Formula: see text]e was higher to maintain the Pa CO 2 unchanged. The effort to eliminate one unit-volume of CO 2 , was double in patients who failed (68.9 [42.4-123] vs. 39 [20.1-57] cm H 2 O/[L/min]; P  = 0.007), owing to the higher physiological Vd (68 [58.73] % vs. 54 [41.64] %; P  = 0.012). End-tidal partial carbon dioxide pressure (Pet CO 2 )/Pa CO 2 ratio was a clinical variable strongly associated with weaning outcome at baseline, with area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.87 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.71-1). Similarly, the Pet CO 2 /Pa CO 2 ratio was associated with weaning outcome in the clinical cohort both before the weaning trial (odds ratio, 4.14; 95% CI, 1.32-12.2; P  = 0.015) and at a sweep gas flow of zero (odds ratio, 13.1; 95% CI, 4-44.4; P  < 0.001). Conclusions: The primary reason for weaning failure from VV-ECMO is high effort to eliminate CO 2 . A higher Pet CO 2 /Pa CO 2 ratio was associated with greater likelihood of weaning from VV-ECMO.
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