Role of levosimendan in weaning children requiring veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation after cardiac surgery

Abstract OBJECTIVES Levosimendan use is associated with more successful decannulation from veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA ECMO) in adults. We sought to determine the role of levosimendan in children who required VA ECMO after cardiac surgery. METHODS This observational study c...

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Published inEuropean journal of cardio-thoracic surgery Vol. 59; no. 1; pp. 262 - 268
Main Authors Pan, Kevin C, Shankar, Sai, Millar, Johnny, Chiletti, Roberto, Butt, Warwick, d’Udekem, Yves, Namachivayam, Siva P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Germany Oxford University Press 04.01.2021
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Summary:Abstract OBJECTIVES Levosimendan use is associated with more successful decannulation from veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA ECMO) in adults. We sought to determine the role of levosimendan in children who required VA ECMO after cardiac surgery. METHODS This observational study compares the outcomes of children who required VA ECMO after cardiac surgery and received levosimendan for weaning with those who did not receive the drug. A doubly robust estimation methodology (inverse probability of treatment weighting with regression adjustment) was used to balance study covariates (age, weight, sex, lactate pre-ECMO, vasoactive-inotropic score pre-ECMO, ECMO indication, ECMO modality, Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery-1 category), and the final model was further adjusted for duration of ECMO. RESULTS Between January 2012 and December 2018, 118 eligible children received 145 ECMO runs [failed weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass, 67/145 (46%); low cardiac output state, 30/145 (21%); extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation, 47/145 (32%); other reasons in 1]. Levosimendan was administered before decannulation in 54/145 (37%) runs. The median time to start levosimendan after ECMO cannulation was 39 h (interquartile range, 14–83 h). The unadjusted rates of weaning failure in the levosimendan vs control group were 7% (4/54) vs 19% (17/91). In the controlled analysis, levosimendan was associated with decreased risk of weaning failure [adjusted relative risk (95% confidence interval), 0.20 (0.07–0.57)] and decreased risk of in-hospital mortality [adjusted relative risk (95% confidence interval), 0.45 (0.26–0.76)]. CONCLUSIONS Levosimendan administration in children requiring VA ECMO after cardiac surgery was associated with decreased risk of weaning failure and decreased in-hospital mortality.
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ISSN:1010-7940
1873-734X
DOI:10.1093/ejcts/ezaa275