In this case report, we present a young female patient with active IVDU that was surgically treated for infective endocarditis during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, this patient required postcardiotomy extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), which has never been reported previously in patients with infective endocarditis due to active IVDU. We share the decision-making process and ethical dilemmas the healthcare team faced in hopes of acting as a precedent for future cases.
The first issue we would like to discuss is the controversy of offering cardiac surgery for infective endocarditis in patients who are unwilling to quit IVDU. Native valve endocarditis is often managed medically. However, certain features, such as valvular abscesses, a large vegetation size, bradyarrhythmias, and severe valve dysfunction, may warrant surgical intervention in both the general population and those with IVDU.[1,2] It is estimated that 20 to 40% of IVDU-related endocarditis cases may require surgical treatment, with more than half requiring repeat surgical intervention.[3] T he r eported p erioperative mortality may be as high as 12%.[4] Furthermore, the risk of prosthetic valve reinfection with ongoing IVDU after discharge from the hospital is extremely high and can occur in up to 32% of patients.[5] Prosthetic valve endocarditis typically requires surgical treatment that carries up to 80% mortality risk and an elevated risk of perioperative complications, such as sepsis, renal failure, and heart failure.[6,7] Therefore, due to the high rates of reinfection and the extremely poor outcomes with repeat surgical interventions, it is highly controversial whether or not the first surgical intervention should even be offered to patients who continue to inject drugs.[8]
Consequently, the decision regarding surgical treatment must be patient-centered and reflect the patient"s wishes. The team in charge of the treatment plan should tailor decisions to each patient"s clinical goals and values as well as their social situation, with emphasis on the patient's wellbeing. As per the World Medical Association's International Code of Medical Ethics, a fundamental responsibility of the physician is to "be dedicated to providing competent medical service in full professional and moral independence, with compassion and respect for human dignity," while preventing harm to the patient.[9] This is further enforced in the Canada Health Act.[10] The decision for patient care should consider more than just the patient"s physical condition.
Offering surgery for patients with IVDU who are unwilling to quit is a challenging ethical dilemma that involves tensions between the ethical principles of respecting patient autonomy, beneficence, and nonmaleficence, and justice, particularly if they are presenting with repeat endocarditis after receiving a prosthetic valve.[11] From a clinical perspective, surgery is the best and likely the only curative treatment option; without surgery, the patient would most likely die. However, these patients will almost certainly develop new prosthetic infections if they continue IVDU and thus be subjected to postoperative complications and high mortality rates, as mentioned previously. Additionally, these procedures require prolonged, postoperative hospital stays and massive consumption of resources at both a financial and personnel level. This is in direct contraindication with the ethical principle of stewardship, which involves the duty to use scarce resources responsibly.
In this case, the patient was unwilling to quit IVDU as she did not think her drug use was a problem, but clinically needed surgery in order to survive infective endocarditis. As the patient continued to deteriorate, the team had many discussions regarding the best mode of action to ensure her survival and wellbeing while also taking into consideration her multi-faceted social situation and two children. A decision was reached to perform surgery with a contingency plan of rehabilitation, close community follow-up, and organization support from Street Health, a local community health center that provides support for individuals with substance use issues.[12] These steps were taken to ensure the patient had proper postoperative support and aid. Further plans were enacted to protect the patient's children while she was recovering.
Second issue is the use of ECMO for patients with active endocarditis and IVDU. Unfortunately, this patient did not tolerate the surgical intervention, and the only option was ECMO support. Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation requires the presence of highly trained staff around the clock. There are no previously published reports of the outcomes of using postcardiotomy ECMO in patients with infective endocarditis due to active IVDU. However, limited experience with the use of percutaneous ECMO in drug-dependent patients has resulted in longer hospital stays and higher rates of complications.[13]
Another dilemma the team faced was whether it was ethically the right decision to put this patient on ECMO, knowing that she may face longer hospital stays and poorer postoperative outcomes. Additionally, ECMO would require the allocation of a perfusionist around the clock, which would inevitably result in reducing nearly half the elective and inpatient cardiac operations in our unit. Furthermore, we could no longer offer ECMO to other patients who may require it, including any potential COVID-19 patients. Due to the pandemic, ECMO use was strictly rationed, and the selection criteria became increasingly stringent to reserve therapy only to patients with the highest chance of survival.
Therefore, the care team experienced significant moral distress in this position as this decision would consume precious resources, such as highly trained personnel and hospital technology, in a situation where the patient was drug dependent and expressed no desire to stop IVDU, particularly during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Although we questioned the patient"s ability to truly appreciate how her IVDU had harmed her health to the point of requiring such extensive life-saving interventions, ultimately, the choice was made to pursue ECMO to ensure the patient"s survival and future rehabilitation while also lengthening the amount of time available to make the next series of decisions.
Third, we struggled to find the correct intervention following ECMO. Postcardiotomy ECMO is a short-term mechanical support device that can be utilized temporarily (a few days to a few weeks) and is generally associated with a high incidence of morbidity and mortality, ranging from 24.8 to 52% of patients.[14] Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation acts as a bridge to either patient recovery or more definitive therapy, namely a long-term ventricular assist device or cardiac transplantation.[15] For otherwise healthy or minimally comorbid patients, both these latter options can be offered depending on the patients' clinical condition. Upon initiation of ECMO therapy, all these options need to be discussed by the relevant teams.
On the one hand, there is limited evidence to guide patient selection for long-term mechanical cardiac support. The 2019 European Association of Cardiothoracic Surgery Expert Consensus on longterm mechanical circulatory support advises against such therapy in patients with active substance abuse; however, this is based on expert opinion and does not take into account the many intricacies of a patient's clinical and social situation.[16] Similarly, the availability of adequate social support and appropriate ventricular device care programs are essential components of patient eligibility for long-term support therapy. On the other hand, in patients with non-IVDU-related infective endocarditis, heart transplantation is a very high-risk procedure and is often considered a bailout or salvage procedure due to the need for intense immunosuppression.[17,18] Furthermore, candidates for an organ transplant are required to have a satisfactory social support network in the postoperative recovery period.[19]
There are currently no reports of heart transplants performed in patients with infective endocarditis due to active IVDU. This may be due to the potential spread of infection to the new orthotopic heart and the lack of adequate social support, which is often the case in a significant proportion of this vulnerable patient population.
In our patient's case, due to the ongoing infective endocarditis, the continued IVDU, and the limited available social support in her community, her options were slim and balanced precariously on her ability to refrain from IVDU in the future. Should she be able to achieve that feat, potential LVAD or cardiac transplantation could be considered if she remained ECMO-dependent, although this was a route the healthcare team wished to avoid if possible.
Lastly, the allocation of scarce resources amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. In healthcare, the question is "how to allocate scarce life-saving resources has been the main ethical dilemma," which is particularly true during the COVID-19 pandemic.[20] Over one year into the pandemic, there continues to be a rapid rise in cases, further placing unprecedented strains on healthcare systems worldwide. Areas with surges in cases have experienced elevated needs for life support systems, often greater than the available supply. This includes ECMO, with increasingly stringent eligibility criteria as the numbers of COVID-19 patients increase.[21] Additionally, as mentioned previously, ECMO requires great amounts of personnel and precious staff resources.
Although active IVDU is a relative contraindication for ECMO, our patient would have otherwise been eligible, as she had no other co-morbidities. However, the vast limitation in resources caused by the pandemic, compounded with previously discussed factors, made the decision difficult to pursue ECMO.
After much discussion and debate, despite it being the peak of COVID-19 with limited resources, ECMO support was ultimately pursued for the patient. The patient was able to tolerate ECMO and was slowly weaned off. She had a long recovery while in the hospital, providing time for the multidisciplinary team of cardiac surgeons, ICU attendings, nurses, social workers, and psychiatrists to ensure postoperative abstinence from IVDU. Education on the dangers of IVDU and the extremely high risks of repeat operations, paired with intensive counseling from the cardiac and allied health teams, reiterated the critical need for the patient to abstain from IVDU. These efforts and the harrowing near-death experience ultimately changed the patient"s mind, and she adamantly promised to never use intravenous drugs again in the future. This was reaffirmed at the one-month follow-up appointment, and she will be followed closely throughout her care by the cardiac surgeon, family physician, and community.
In conclusion, this case revealed several ethical dilemmas, which were addressed through a multidisciplinary team approach that took into account the patient's best interests while dealing with the many challenges created by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Patient Consent for Publication: A written informed consent was obtained from each patient.
Data Sharing Statement: The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Author Contributions: ZM, DP, MED were involved in patient care. SJ wrote the manuscript with support and edits from ZM, DC, DP, and MED; DC offered medical ethics expertise; DP and MED supervised the project.
Conflict of Interest: The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding: The authors received no financial support for the research and/or authorship of this article.
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