Evolution of the United States Military Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation Transport Team

Author:

Read Matthew D1,Nam Jason J2,Biscotti Mauer1,Piper Lydia C1,Thomas Sarah B1,Sams Valerie G1,Elliott Bernadette S1,Negaard Kathryn A1,Lantry James H3,DellaVolpe Jeffry D45,Batchinsky Andriy6,Cannon Jeremy W7,Mason Phillip E1

Affiliation:

1. Brooke Army Medical Center, 3551 Roger Brooke Dr, Fort Sam Houston, TX 78234

2. US Army Special Operations Command, Bldg X4047 New Dawn Drive, Fort Bragg, NC 78234

3. University of Maryland School of Medicine, 655 W Baltimore St S, Baltimore, MD 21201

4. Methodist Healthcare System, 8109 Fredericksburg Rd, San Antonio, TX 78229

5. Geneva Foundation, 917 Pacific Ave, Tacoma, WA 98402

6. Autonomous Reanimation and Evacuation Program, The Geneva Foundation, 917 Pacific Ave, Tacoma, WA 98402

7. University of Pennsylvania and the Presbyterian Medical Center, 3801 Filbert St #212, Philadelphia, PA 19104

Abstract

Abstract Introduction The use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for the care of critically ill adult patients has increased over the past decade. It has been utilized in more austere locations, to include combat wounded. The U.S. military established the Acute Lung Rescue Team in 2005 to transport and care for patients unable to be managed by standard medical evacuation resources. In 2012, the U.S. military expanded upon this capacity, establishing an ECMO program at Brooke Army Medical Center. To maintain currency, the program treats both military and civilian patients. Materials and methods We conducted a single-center retrospective review of all patients transported by the sole U.S. military ECMO program from September 2012 to December 2019. We analyzed basic demographic data, ECMO indication, transport distance range, survival to decannulation and discharge, and programmatic growth. Results The U.S. military ECMO team conducted 110 ECMO transports. Of these, 88 patients (80%) were transported to our facility and 81 (73.6%) were cannulated for ECMO by our team prior to transport. The primary indication for ECMO was respiratory failure (76%). The range of transport distance was 6.5 to 8,451 miles (median air transport distance = 1,328 miles, median ground transport distance = 16 miles). In patients who were cannulated remotely, survival to decannulation was 76% and survival to discharge was 73.3%. Conclusions Utilization of the U.S. military ECMO team has increased exponentially since January 2017. With an increased tempo of transport operations and distance of critical care transport, survival to decannulation and discharge rates exceed national benchmarks as described in ELSO published data. The ability to cannulate patients in remote locations and provide critical care transport to a military medical treatment facility has allowed the U.S. military to maintain readiness of a critical medical asset.

Funder

USAF/AFMS

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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