What this means in practice
For refractory cardiac arrest with a shockable heart rhythm or reversible causes
There is enough evidence on the safety and efficacy of this procedure for healthcare professionals to consider VA ECMO for ECPR as an option.
Healthcare professionals should discuss the available options with the person with refractory cardiac arrest (and their family members and carers as appropriate) before a joint decision is made, if possible (see NICE's page on shared decision making).
Hospital trusts will have their own policies on funding procedures and monitoring results. NHS England may also have policies on funding of procedures.
For refractory cardiac arrest with a non-shockable heart rhythm or irreversible causes
There is not enough evidence to know if this procedure is effective. VA ECMO for ECPR should only be done as part of formal research.
For everyone having the procedure
Auditing of outcomes
Healthcare professionals doing this procedure should collect data on safety and outcomes of the procedure. Enter details about everyone having this procedure into the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization registry and regularly review the data on outcomes and safety. Healthcare professionals are also encouraged to enter data into the National Cardiac Arrest Audit.
Who should be involved in the procedure
Patient selection should be done by a multidisciplinary team. The procedure should only be done in centres specialising in using VA ECMO for ECPR for refractory cardiac arrest and by healthcare professionals with specific training in this procedure.