BACKGROUND: Patients with pre-existing severe cardiovascular comorbidities are often deemed ineligible for potentially life-saving thoracic surgeries and are referred to other conservative therapies. However, this patient population may theoretically benefit from the timely perioperative implantation of temporary mechanical circulation support (tMCS) to both mitigate the surgical stress and stabilize hemodynamics. We performed a scoping review to summarize the evidence regarding the use of tMCS in thoracic surgery. METHODS: We conducted a systematic search across PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Web of Science, Scopus, and Google Scholar from their inception, aided by a search string encompassing a combination of terms for the key research concepts: i) tMCS devices
ii) thoracic surgery procedures (except lung transplantation)
and iii) the adult population. RESULTS: Fifteen studies pertinent to the research question, which summarized data from 28 patients, were retrieved for inclusion. In 14 patients, tMCS implantation occurred as a "pre-emptive" strategy, while the remaining patients had tMCS implanted either intra and/or postoperatively as a "bail-out" strategy. Specifically, 14 patients required an intra-aortic balloon pump, 10 veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, two required a multidevice strategy, and one cardiopulmonary bypass. The relative risk analysis revealed that the mortality rate in the pre-emptive group was half that of the bail-out group. Additionally, the risk of both infectious and vascular complications was lower in the pre-emptive group compared to the bail-out tMCS strategy. CONCLUSION: We found that the timely implantation of tMCS in thoracic surgery-either to mitigate patients' heightened cardiovascular risk or as a rescue strategy in the event of life-threatening surgical complications-may lead to better patient outcomes, as well as allowing them to undergo curative surgery with an acceptable safety profile, characterized by overall good survival rates and a low incidence of device-related complications.