Miroslav Durila, Jaromir Vajter, Michal Garaj, Jan Berousek, Robert Lischke, Michal Hlavacek, Tomas Vymazal | Artificial Organs | March 2025 | IF: 2,2 | doi.

prof. MUDr. Miroslav Durila, MHA, Ph.D., Department of Anaesthesiology and ICM, , Second Faculty od Medicine and Motol University Hospital
Abstract
Background
Unfractionated heparin is used as the most common anticoagulation for venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV ECMO) patients. However, it is accompanied by frequent bleeding and thrombotic complications. The aim of the study was to demonstrate the feasibility of Enoxaparin anticoagulation for VV ECMO patients.
Methods
This study is a retrospective analysis of VV ECMO patients on continuous intravenous Enoxaparin anticoagulation. The primary outcome was the incidence of bleeding, thrombotic, and neurological complications during ECMO support. The secondary outcome was an analysis of secondary and primary hemostasis profiles.
Results
Data from 38 patients were analyzed in this study. The incidence of bleeding complications was 5.3%, for thrombotic complications it was 2.6% and for neurological (bleeding/ischemic events) complications it was 10.5%. The targeted anti-Xa activity of 0.4–0.6 IU/mL was achieved and maintained during whole ECMO period in 28 patients (73.8%), not affecting the hemocoagulation profile represented by APTT-r 1.15 ± 0.2, TT 18.67 ± 3.35 s, PT/INR 1.21 ± 0.19, fibrinogen 5.39 ± 1.49 g/L, antithrombin, and platelet count. Primary hemostasis pathology was diagnosed in all patients by PFA 200 tests Col/EPI 279 ± 38 s and Col/ADP 249 ± 66 s. The running time of ECMO was 7.8 ± 3.4 days.
Conclusions
Enoxaparin anticoagulation appears to be feasible for VV ECMO patients without an increase in adverse events. Further larger-sampled and comparative studies are needed in the future to support our findings.