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Clinical Trial Summary

The extracorporeal CO2 removal (ECCO2R) has been recently proposed in case of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) in order to reduce pulmonary injuries induced by the mechanical ventilation. A reducing of tidal volume and/or respiratory rate is thus expected using this extracorporeal respiratory support. However, most of existing devices of ECCO2R can apply only a limited extracorporeal flow, often less than 1L/min, which limits the CO2 exchanges and does not allow to reach an ultraprotective ventilation. An extracorporeal flow higher should logically maximalize CO2 removal and allow reducing intensity of mechanical ventilation. Works focused on high-flow ECCO2R (2-3 L/min) in setting of ARDS are therefore mandatory to better understand apprehend the phenomena of gazes changes with this device and confirm the added-value in management of these specific patients.


Clinical Trial Description

This is a prospective interventional study focused on a cohort population. The included patients will be those affected by a severe ARDS (Berlin definition) requiring an aggressive mechanical ventilation and whom a high-flow ECCO2R was implemented. The high-flow ECCO2R will be proposed in all patients with inclusions criteria with the 15 first days following their admission. The day of initiation of the high-flow ECCO2R will considered as Day 0 in our study. A data collection will be focused on the respiratory parameters, clinical complications until ICU discharge and outcome, extracted from medical records. The main endpoint will be the perrcentage of patients whom an ultraprotective ventilation could be applied successfully during more than 12h. Ultraprotective ventilation is defined in our work as follows: Tidal volume ≤ 3 mL/kg and respiratory rate ≤ 16/min associated with a PaCO2 ≤ 45mmHg and a PaO2 ≥ 55 mmHg. The secondary endpoints will be durations of mechanical ventilation, ICU stay and hospitalization, as well as rheological behavior of extracorporeal circulation, respiratory parameters under high-flow ECCO2R, specific complications and mortality. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04556578
Study type Interventional
Source University Hospital, Montpellier
Contact Jonathan Charbit, MD
Phone +33467338256
Email j-charbit@chu-montpellier.fr
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 16, 2021
Completion date February 16, 2025