Multidisciplinary cardiogenic shock team approach improves the long-term outcomes of patients suffering from refractory cardiogenic shock treated with short-term mechanical circulatory support
European Heart Journal - Acute CardioVascular Care

Abstract
Short-term mechanical circulatory support (STMCS) may be used as an intentional escalation strategy to treat refractory cardiogenic shock (rCS). However, with growing technical possibilities, making the right choice at the right time can be challenging. We established a shock team in January 2013 comprising a cardiac anaesthetist–intensivist, an interventional cardiologist, and a cardiac surgeon. Since then, a diagnosis of rCS has triggered a multidisciplinary team meeting based on a common algorithm. This study aimed to compare the decision-making process for STMCS for rCS before (2007–2013) and after (2013–2019) the creation of the shock team.
This before-and-after cohort study was conducted over a 156-month period. Post-cardiotomy rCS were excluded. The primary outcome was a 1-year survival rate. In total, 250 consecutive adult patients were included in the analysis (84 in the control group and 166 in the shock team group). At baseline, the CardShock score was not different between the two groups (5[3–5] vs. 5[4–6],
A multidisciplinary shock team-based decision for STMCS device implantation in rCS is associated with better 1-year survival rates.
Contributors

François-Xavier Hérion
Author

Antoine Beurton
Author

Claire Oddos
Author

Karine Nubret
Author

Clément Aguerreche
Author

Astrid Quessard
Author

Maxime Faure
Author

Mathieu Pernot
Author

Julien Imbault
Author

Alexandre Ouattara
Author
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