Abstract
Extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation (eCPR) is a rapidly growing treatment strategy due to significant improvement in selected patients' survival rates. Gender-related differences might impact the outcome of therapeutic measures. Therefore, we sought to investigate patients with eCPR at our interdisciplinary extracorporeal membrane oxygenation center regarding sex-related differences with the view to potentially adjusting current selection criteria. From January 2016 to December 2019, 71 patients underwent eCPR at our institution. Data before eCPR and early outcome parameters were analyzed comparing male and female patients. The cohort analyzed consisted of 60 male (84%) and 11 female (15%) patients. Comparing both groups, male patients significantly more frequently suffered out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (68% male vs. 36% female, P =.04), whereas female patients were associated with more in-hospital cardiac arrest (32% male vs. 64% female, P =.04). Creatinine levels differed significantly (1.5 (1.1;2.1) mg/dL in male vs. 1.0 (0.7;1.5) mg/dL in female patients, P =.03). Also, several hepatic parameters showed a significant difference between the groups: aspartate aminotransferase 423 (249;804) U/L in male vs. 115 (61;408) U/L in female patients, P =.01; alanine aminotransferase 174 (102;446) U/L in male vs. 86 (36;118) U/L in female patients, P =.01). Renal failure requiring hemodialysis occurred more frequently in men than in women (P
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Gaisendrees, C., Djordjevic, I., Sabashnikov, A., Adler, C., Eghbalzadeh, K., Ivanov, B., … Wahlers, T. (2021). Gender-related differences in treatment and outcome of extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation-patients. Artificial Organs, 45(5), 488–494. https://doi.org/10.1111/aor.13844
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