Baseline characteristics and in-hospital mortality predictors in female patients on venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: Impact of pregnancy.

Publication date: Jul 21, 2025

Venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO) is often used for lung rest in critically ill patients, including pregnant patients. We aimed to determine how pregnant and non-pregnant patients requiring VV-ECMO differed from each other and how pregnancy impacted in-hospital mortality. We used the National Inpatient Sample to identify a cohort of female patients requiring VV-ECMO from 2016 to 2021, stratified by pregnancy status. Baseline characteristics were compared using Pearson chi-square test. Predictors of in-hospital mortality, including pregnancy and complications from VV-ECMO, were determined using multivariate analysis with a logistic regression model. Of 7365 female patients requiring VV-ECMO, 700 (9. 5 %) were pregnant. Pregnant patients were younger. COVID-19 was more prevalent in pregnant patients (72. 9 % versus 36. 4 %, p < 0. 001). Infectious complications were more common in non-pregnant patients (64. 1 % versus 43. 6 %, p < 0. 001). Pregnant patients suffered from less in-hospital mortality (20. 0 % versus 38. 5 %, p < 0. 001), and pregnancy predicted survival (adjusted odds ratio (OR): 0. 49 [0. 27-0. 89], p = 0. 02). Length of stay ≥7 days and COPD were associated with reduced odds of in-hospital mortality; chronic heart failure, COVID-19, and VV-ECMO complications were associated with increased odds of in-hospital mortality. These findings underscore the unique clinical profile and outcomes of pregnant females requiring VV-ECMO, highlighting the need for tailored management strategies. Prospective studies are essential to validate these observations and optimize care for this vulnerable patient population.

Concepts Keywords
Inpatient Claims analysis
Mortality National Inpatient Sample
Pregnancy Outcomes
Pregnancy

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH critically ill
disease MESH complications
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH COPD
disease MESH heart failure
disease MESH Acute respiratory distress syndrome

Original Article

(Visited 2 times, 1 visits today)