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ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D....

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ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Children’s Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri – Kansas City @COPYRIGHT 2012
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Page 1: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with

innovative devices

John D. Lantos M.D.

Children’s Mercy Bioethics Center

University of Missouri – Kansas City

@COPYRIGHT 2012

Page 2: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Central tension: science v. ethics

• How much to modify the science in order to meet the demands of ethics.– We want progress– We want to not harm people in the process’

• We have our own conflicts– We want to make money, get famous, be

respected, earn the gratitude of suffering families, etc.

Page 3: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

We regulate ourselves, sorta

• Well-defined system for new drugs.

• Less well-defined system for new devices.

• No system for new operations.

• VADS: New operations using new devices. i.e. an ethical and regulatory morass.

Page 4: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Berlin heart• A paracorporeal pulsatile device

• Stroke volumes of 10, 25, 30, 50, and 60 ml

• Synchronous, asynchronous, and independent modes

• Rechargeable 5hr battery

• Can be used as outpatient device.

• Univentricular (right or left) or biventricular support.

Page 5: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –
Page 6: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –
Page 7: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Regulatory approvals

• European Union – 1996

• Canada – 2009

• USA – 2011

• As of January 2011, 900 patients implanted worldwide with over 187 patient years of support.

Page 8: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

But what do we really know?

• Do we know enough?

• Was the approval process appropriately cautious? Or idiotically risk-averse?

• What will happen now? (In the US, unlike Europe or Canada, once something is approved, the free market takes over.)

Page 9: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Good science (gold standard): Prospective RCT

• Impossible with BH:– Patients are at death’s door.– Often already on ECMO.– Nobody would agree to be randomized.

Page 10: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

So what was the basis for approval?

• Berlin heart vs. an historical control group that received ECMO.

• ECMO group matched in age, size, and illness severity with BH group.

• Two cohorts, (BSA <0.7, >0.7)» http://www.fda.gov/downloads/

AdvisoryCommittees/CommitteesMeetingMaterials/MedicalDevices/MedicalDevicesAdvisoryCommittee/CirculatorySystemDevicesPanel/UCM263039.pdf

Page 11: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Age at initiation 0 - 30 days 0 (0%) 0 (0%) 0.1 30d – 2yrs 20 (83%) 30 (62%) 2 to 10yrs 4 (17%) 18 (37%) 10 to 16yrs 0 (0%) 0 (0%)

http://www.fda.gov/downloads/AdvisoryCommittees/CommitteesMeetingMaterials/MedicalDevices/MedicalDevicesAdvisoryCommittee/CirculatorySystemDevicesPanel/

UCM263039.pdf

Berlin heart ECMO p- value

Berlin Heart patients younger

Page 12: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Age (months)

Mean ± Std 15.4 ± 12.4 18.5 ± 11.5 0.29

Median 11.7 16.1

Min – Max 2.6 - 45.6 1.8 – 43.7

http://www.fda.gov/downloads/AdvisoryCommittees/CommitteesMeetingMaterials/MedicalDevices/MedicalDevicesAdvisoryCommittee/CirculatorySystemDevicesPanel/UCM263039.pdf

Berlin heart ECMO/ELS P-value

Page 13: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Many SAEs with BH

• Most prevalent SAEs – major infections 56% (27/48) – major bleeding 46% (22/48) – hypertension 42% (20/48), – neurological dysfunction 29% (14/48)

Page 14: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Better survival than ECMO(Cohort I – smaller babies)

Page 15: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Survival – Cohort II

Page 16: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –
Page 17: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –
Page 18: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Data seems compelling

Page 19: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

All who drink of this treatment recover within a short time, except in those who do not.

Therefore, it fails only in incurable cases

--Galen

Page 20: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

The challenge

• How can you pick the children– A. Who would die without the BH– B. Will survive with it– C. Will go on to have a good QOL

Page 21: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Analogies between ECMO and the Berlin Heart (or other VADs)

Page 22: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Historical development of ECMO

• First used in adults– case report of success in NEJM, 1968– multicenter RCT - 90 patients, 9 centers, no

improvement in survival. (Zapol, JAMA, 1979)– Early trials in babies continued, no RCTs– Bartlett had a series of papers showing

improvement over historical controls.

Page 23: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Bartlett’s survival rates

• 1976 - 4/13 “moribund” infants

• 1977 - 3/16 (4 “improved”)

• 1979 - 13/29

• 1982 - 25/45

• 1986 - 72/100

• Many doubters demanded an RCT

Page 24: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

ECMO in the 1980s

• Bartlett was not in equipoise, didn’t want to “randomize babies to death” but recognized community equipoise.

• Developed modified study designs– “play the winner”– pre-randomization/modified stopping rules

• Results convince many doubters

Page 25: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

International differences

• ECMO widely adopted in the US

• UK did a large, prospective, multicenter, RCT.

Page 26: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Multicentre RCT in UK

• 180 babies

• Two years

• Stopped early with clear benefit of ECMO

Page 27: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Results of UK trial

30/93 (32%) ECMO infants died compared with 54/92 (59%) controls. (p = 0.0005).

One child in each group has severe disability. 16 (10 ECMO, 6 controls) have lesser impairments.

Page 28: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

The ECMO debate

• Was registry data enough?

• Did we need the prospective RCT?

• Is the RCT enough? Should we do another to confirm?

• When do we know enough?

Page 29: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Two responses to the trial

• Essential; now we really know (Silverman)

• Useless and unethical; we already knew (Lantos)

Page 30: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

The dilemma

“How can we balance the technical challenge of perfecting hardware for life support against medicine’s humane imperative to avoid needless pain and suffering?”

– William Silverman, Paediatric Perinatol Epidemiolgy, 1997

Page 31: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

The dilemma

• “At some point, we have to make a judgment about whether enough is known about a treatment to deem it better, worse, or about the same as another treatment.

– Lantos, Paed Perinat Epidem 1997

Page 32: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –
Page 33: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –
Page 34: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Equipoise: a contentious concept

• A subject should only be submitted to a randomized, controlled design if there is substantial uncertainty about which treatment is better.

Also, horse of the year in 1932!

Page 35: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

The paradox of equipoise

• We must be in equipoise to do an RCT.• We know the efficacy of standard treatment.• In order to be genuinely uncertain about the

innovative treatment, we must know also know something about the innovative treatment.

• If we know enough to deem it equivalent, we must be able to know enough to deem it better or worse.

Page 36: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

The inescapable conclusion

• Equipoise presupposes the value of historical data in evaluating the safety and efficacy of therapy or the ethical acceptability of a randomized trial.

Page 37: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

The way things are

• We always rely on historical data.

• We rarely need an RCT.

• We do need standardized, carefully collected, complete historical data.

Page 38: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Two moral imperatives

• Self-reflection: Separating insecurity, grandiosity, professional aspirations, economic incentives, etc., from our obligations to do what is best for patients

• Transparency: Being clear, open, and honest with patients, families and colleagues about means, ends, methods, risks, uncertainties.

Page 39: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Just because it is not an RCT….

• Doesn’t mean there is no……protocol.

…ethical obligation to get informed consent.

…need to carefully collect and analyze data.

Page 40: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

Fallacies to avoid

• Randomized controlled trials are the only way to know anything for sure

• Unexpected situations justify repeated breaches of protocol

• Good intentions lead to good results

• Tradition is always safer than innovation

Page 41: ECMO, LVADs, and the ethics of innovative surgery with innovative devices John D. Lantos M.D. Childrens Mercy Bioethics Center University of Missouri –

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