Автор: Christine Wu
Дата: 16.12.2024
The authors' point? Limiting static or dynamic ∆P can further reduce the mortality of patients requiring mechanical ventilation.
Does sustained limitation of driving pressure; both static (ΔP) and dynamic (ΔPdyn), reduce 30-day mortality in mechanically ventilated ICU patients with acute respiratory failure compared to usual care?
Adult patients (≥ 18 yrs) 24 hours or more of invasive or noninvasive mechanical ventilation.
Inclusion criteria | Mechanical ventilation lasting more than 24 hours Exposed to positive-pressure ventilation within the first 24 hours after ICU admission Available measurements for ΔP at baseline (for ΔP analyses) For patients with multiple admissions, only the data from the first admission was considered and among those, only the first episode of ventilation lasting more than 24 hours was included in the analysis |
Exclusion criteria | Mechanical ventilation lasting 24 hours or less Patients who did not receive positive-pressure ventilation (e.g., only high flow nasal oxygen therapy) during the first 24 hours in the ICU. Patients without baseline ΔP measurements |
Comparison of ventilation strategies | Compared strategies limiting daily ΔP or ΔPdyn to ≤ 15 cmH2O with usual care practices. |
Threshold selection | Chosen based on prior studies using thresholds of 14 or 15 cmH2O for ΔP or ΔPdyn; ΔPdyn may underestimate spontaneous breathing contributions. |
ΔP calculation | Calculated as plateau pressure minus positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) during occlusion manuevers. |
ΔPdyn calculation | For mechanically ventilated patients: Daily ΔPdyn = peak inspiratory pressure (PIP) − PEEP For noninvasive ventilation: Daily ΔPdyn = inspiratory positive airway pressure (IPAP) − expiratory positive airway pressure (EPAP) |
Additional analyses | Investigated various other thresholds for ΔP and ΔPdyn that could be targeted during mechanical ventilation. |
Outcomes and duration of follow-up
Primary outcome | Ventilator mortality up to 30 days. Competing events: Successful liberation from mechanical ventilation or ICU discharge was considered a competing event for ventilator mortality. Definition of successful liberation: Transition from mechanical ventilation to either room air or supplemental oxygen for more than 48 hours. Follow-up duration: Patients were followed from the initiation of mechanical ventilation (day 0) until death, ICU discharge, successful liberation, or 30 days in the ICU, whichever occurred first. Treatment strategy initiation: Initiated 24 hours after the start of mechanical ventilation (day 1) and sustained throughout the entire duration of mechanical ventilation. |
Secondary analyses | Two secondary analyses with modified ventilator procedures were conducted: 1. Investigated the effect on mortality of different ventilation strategies that limit daily tidal volumes or PIPs, irrespective of ΔP levels. 2. Estimated the causal effect on mortality based on the timing and duration of limiting ΔPdyn (≤ 15 cmH2O) with the following strategies: - Early and short intervention (days 1 to 5) - Early but time-limited intervention (days 1 to 14) - Delayed intervention (days 5 to 30) - Late intervention (days 14 to 30) |
Main results
Patient population | Data from 19,989 patients were recorded; 12,865 patients were included in the final analysis after excluding: - 4,493 patients (22%) liberated from mechanical ventilation or discharged from the ICU within 24 hours - 2,631 patients (13%) who did not receive positive-pressure ventilation in the first 24 hours |
Patient characteristics | Median tidal volume during the first 24 hours: 6.7 ml/kg predicted body weight (IQR: 6.0–7.9 mL/kg) 52% (6,638 patients) were spontaneously breathing 22% (2,794 patients) ventilated in pressure support mode ΔPdyn > 15 cmH2O in 35% (4,468 patients) ΔP measured in 19% (2,473 patients), with 14% > 15 cmH2O |
Primary analysis | Estimated ventilator mortality at 30 days: - Usual care: 28.7% (24.1%–51.7%) - Limiting ΔP ≤ 15 cmH2O: 28.1% (23.8%–51.0%) - Absolute risk difference: –0.6% (95% CI: –1.2% to –0.3%); risk ratio: 0.98 (95% CI: 0.96–0.99) Overall population ventilator mortality: - Usual care: 20.1% (19.4%–20.9%). - Limiting ΔPdyn ≤ 15 cmH2O: 18.1% (17.5%–18.9%) - Absolute risk difference: –1.9% (95% CI: –2.2% to –1.7%); risk ratio: 0.90 (95% CI: 0.89–0.92). |
Effect of limiting ΔP | A higher proportion of patients liberated from mechanical ventilation or discharged from ICU contributed to reduced mortality (risk ratio: 1.03; 95% CI: 1.03–1.04). ΔPdyn differed by an average of 2 cmH2O between groups after treatment assignment. A dose-dependent reduction in ventilator mortality with stricter limitations on both ΔP and ΔPdyn was observed. |
Secondary analyses | Investigated different ventilation strategies limiting tidal volumes or PIPs; these were not associated with reduced mortality compared to usual care. Early and sustained intervention limiting ΔPdyn ≤ 15 cmH2O was more effective than delayed initiation: - Day 5: Risk difference –0.9% (–1.1% to –0.8%) - Day 14: Risk difference –0.3% (–0.4% to –0.2%) |
Sensitivity analyses | Findings were robust, accounting for missing data and potential residual confounding. |
Limiting either static or dynamic ∆P can further reduce the mortality of patients requiring invasive or noninvasive mechanical ventilation.
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