Author: Jean‑Michel Arnal, Senior Intensivist, Hopital Sainte Musse, Toulon, France
Date of first publication: 03.12.2024
Chronic obstructive respiratory disease (COPD) is one of the most common diseases worldwide.
COPD affects 10% of the adult population with an estimated 3 million deaths yearly, which leads to a major economic and social burden (
Management combines pharmacological therapies and physiotherapy to treat the cause with temporary respiratory support to relieve the respiratory distress. Noninvasive ventilation (NIV) is currently the gold standard for treating respiratory failure (
However, high flow nasal therapy (HFNT) has been shown to have physiological advantages for severe COPD exacerbation that help decrease the inspiratory load . The effects of a decreased respiratory rate, washout of the nasopharyngeal dead space, PEEP that counterbalances intrinsic PEEP, and humidification concur to decrease PaCO2 (
A recent article reports the results from a Chinese single‑center randomized controlled trial that compared NIV and HFNT in the treatment of severe COPD exacerbation (
Out of 415 patients screened, 228 patients were randomized. Most of them were COPD GOLD stage II and III, with a pH of around 7.30 and a PaCO2 at 60‑65 mmHg at inclusion. In the intention‑to‑treat analysis, treatment failure occurred in 26% and 14% for the HFNT and NIV groups, respectively. The difference between the groups was higher than the non‑inferiority threshold. Similar results were reported for the per‑protocol analysis. The endotracheal intubation rate was 14% and 5% in the HFNT and NIV groups, respectively (p = 0.026). NIV was better in reducing PaCO2 at 48 hours, while HFNT was associated with better patient‑reported comfort and a lower number of nursing airway interventions. There was no difference between the groups in mortality, or in ICU or hospital length of stay.
This study suggests that NIV is superior to HFNT in terms of treatment failure rate. NIV offers the possibility to adjust PEEP and provide extra pressure support, which can increase the patient’s minute volume and decrease their work of breathing more effectively when compared to HFNT. However, because NIV is applied in sessions, using HFNT in between the NIV sessions is associated with a lower respiratory rate, less dyspnea, and improved patient‑reported comfort when compared to low‑flow oxygen (
To conclude, NIV should remain the first‑line ventilation support for severe exacerbation of COPD, while HFNT is useful to support the patient in between NIV sessions.
Hamilton Medical ventilators offer HFNT (