CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 65 enrolled / 65 target
Drug / intervention
ECMO Insertion on pre hospital setting +1 moreother
Likely dose
Not stated in record
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Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT02527031
NCT02527031N/ACompletedOn Track (0.5/mo)Completion was 82mo ago

A Comparative Study Between a Pre-hospital and an In-hospital Circulatory Support Strategy (ECMO) in Refractory Cardiac Arrest

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris·interventional·Posted Aug 18, 2015·Updated Jun 30, 2026

In Brief

A clinical study evaluating ECMO Insertion on pre hospital setting and In Hospital ECMO for Cardiac Arrest and Sudden Death. Completed, enrolled 65 participants across 1 site.

Detailed Summary

Cardiac arrest (CA) affects approximately 40,000 people in France. It is still a major cause of death in a young population. Management of CA is defined by international recommendations, detailed by learned societies in each country. It includes several links that are interconnected for its optimisation. Despite all these improvements, no progress, or little has been made in the survival of CA victims over the past few years in industrialised countries, and the survival rate in France is 3% to 5%. Refractory cardiac arrest is defined as failure, after 30 minutes of specialised resuscitation. It used to be the standard to admit that there was no hope of spontaneous cardiac activity and satisfactory neurological recovery after this period, except in cases of CA with neuroprotection (intoxication, hypothermia). External circulatory support such as "extracorporeal membrane oxygenation" (ECMO) makes it possible to replace the circulatory activity of the myocardium and the respiratory activity of the lungs. In in-hospital cardiac arrest (CA) some teams use ECMO with an improvement in the survival rate of 20% in comparison to standard resuscitation. This use demonstrates the possibility of neurological recovery independent of the recovery of spontaneous cardiac activity which can be differed. These results encouraged the use of ECMOs in cases of out-of-hospital refractory cardiac arrests. Patients who are victims of CA are resuscitated for 30 minutes on the spot where the CA occurs. They are then transferred to a specialised centre. The significant improvement in survival noted in in-hospital CAs was not observed in the French series of studies concerning out-of-hospital CAs. This survival is currently estimated at 4%. This difference can be partly explained by the difference in time between the beginning of cardiac massage and the implementation of circulatory support by ECMO ("low flow" period). This time period is directly correlated to survival. To demonstrate the superiority of this strategy in terms of survival, investigators would like to conduct a randomised comparative study of two strategies: 1) installation of an ECMO between the 20th minute to the 30 minute of CA, directly at the site of the CA, by emergency physicians and/or specifically trained resuscitators 2) On-site resuscitation optimised with secondary transfer to the hospital for the implementation of support. The purpose is to increase by 5% to 20% the survival of victims of out-of-hospital refractory cardiac arrests with a good neurological prognosis. Main objective: The hypothesis is that pre-hospital ECMO will result in survival for 20% of the patients, considering that the percentage of survival with in-hospital ECMO is less than 5%. Main judgement criterion: Survival with good neurological outcome (CPC 1 or 2) on discharge from intensive care or at 6 months Secondary judgement criteria: Success rate of the implementation of ECMO ECMO implementation time Immediate complications: haemorrhage, infection Number of organ harvesting The quality of survivors' neurological status according to the CPC neurological classification at D 28, 2 months and 1 year Predictive indicators of the prognosis during cardiac arrest via cerebral and biological monitoring Methodology, type of study: This is a prospective randomised study of current care Sample size (SS, power, risk): A total number of 105 patients in each group will make it possible to demonstrate at the alpha risk of 5% and a power of 1-β=90%, a significant difference in favour of early pre-hospital ECMO compared to the current practice with in-hospital ECMO.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesFrance

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
20162017201820192020202120222023202420252026
First PostedAug 18, 2015
Enrollment StartMar 29, 2016
Primary CompletionAug 26, 2019
Study CompletionJul 3, 2020
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 3.4 yearsPosted 10.9 years ago

Arms & Interventions

Pre hospital ECMOactive_comparator

ECMO Insertion on pre hospital setting for a refractory cardiac arrest

Other: ECMO Insertion on pre hospital setting
In Hospital ECMOactive_comparator

ECMO Insertion on in hospital setting for a refractory cardiac arrest

Other: In Hospital ECMO

Interventions

ECMO Insertion on pre hospital settingother

ECMO Insertion on pre hospital setting

In Hospital ECMOother

ECMO Insertion on in hospital setting for a refractory cardiac arrest