V-V ECMO may be utilized for patients with COVID-19 and severe respiratory failure with expected outcomes comparable to patients supported with V-V ECMO prepandemic. |
V-A ECMO may be utilized for patients with COVID-19 and severe cardiac failure; however, the experience is more limited. |
Mobile ECMO is feasible and may be conducted safely for patients with COVID-19. |
Organize ECMO centers within geographic regions to coordinate patient referrals, where feasible. |
Unify patient selection criteria across a geographic region, where feasible. |
Contraindications for ECMO use should become more stringent as ECMO capacity diminishes. |
Data submission to facilitate research is essential for our evolving understanding of optimal ECMO care for patients with COVID-19. |
While some centers have increased their anticoagulation targets, bleeding remains a concern, and there is no data to recommend deviation from conventional anticoagulation goals. |
There is no data to recommend deviation from conventional ECMO practices, e.g., blood product transfusion thresholds, tracheostomy, endotracheal extubation, rehabilitation, cannulation configuration, or ventilator management. |
Potential discontinuation of ECMO in the setting of perceived futility should be clearly discussed with patients and their surrogate decision-makers. |
Rarely, children can require ECMO support for severe ARDS, myocarditis, or multisystem inflammatory disease in children; ECMO patient selection and management should follow conventional guidelines. |