| Literature DB >> 16646987 |
João C Winck1, Luís F Azevedo, Altamiro Costa-Pereira, Massimo Antonelli, Jeremy C Wyatt.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Continuous positive airway pressure ventilation (CPAP) and non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) are accepted treatments in acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema (ACPE). However, it remains unclear whether NPPV is better than CPAP in reducing the need for endotracheal intubation (NETI) rates, mortality and other adverse events. Our aim was to review the evidence about the efficacy and safety of these two methods in ACPE management.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16646987 PMCID: PMC1550884 DOI: 10.1186/cc4905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
General and specific quality criteria
| Sample size (total number of participants) |
| Randomization allocation concealment (adequate, inadequate or uncertain) |
| Objective selection criteria for participants: |
| Yes: if inclusion and exclusion criteria for participants are adequately reported |
| No: if selection criteria are not reported |
| Blinding: |
| Yes: for articles that implemented blinding at any level |
| No: for articles reporting not being able to implement blinding of interventions at any level |
| Not reported: for articles that did not make any mention of blinding |
| Standardization of co-interventions: |
| Yes: if there was an attempt to standardize treatment and care besides the assigned interventions |
| No: if no attempt to standardize was applied |
| Uncertain: if this was not clearly reported |
| Intention-to-treat analysis (adequate, inadequate or uncertain) |
| Complete follow-up details (yes, no, not reported) |
| Outcome definition: |
| Adequate: if objective criteria for endotracheal intubation were defined |
| Inadequate: if the criteria were not defined |
| Uncertain: if application of criteria was unclear |
| Patient selection criteria (inclusion and exclusion) |
| Type of patients (presence of baseline co-morbidity: AMI or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) |
| Description of baseline criteria for severity of illness |
| Report of interventions (technical description of CPAP and NPPV methods) |
| Report of objective criteria for endotracheal intubation (adequate, inadequate or uncertain) |
CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure ventilation; NPPV, non-invasive positive pressure ventilation.
Figure 1Flow chart of the study selection process. ACPO, acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema; ARF = acute respiratory failure; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure ventilation; ETI, endotracheal intubation; NPPV, non-invasive positive pressure ventilation; MT, medical therapy.
General characteristics and general quality criteria of randomized trials in acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema patients included in the study
| Reference | Country and Setting | Sample size | Interventions | Outcomes analyzed | Randomization assignment concealmenta | Objective selection criteriab | Blindingc | Standardization of co-interventionsd | Intention-to-treat analysise | Complete follow-up detailsf | Outcome definitiong |
| Rasanen | Finland: ED and ICU | 40 | SMT vs CPAP | Meeting criteria for ETI during 3 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality | Adequate | Yes | NR | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
| Bersten | Australia: ICU | 39 | SMT vs CPAP | Meeting criteria for ETI during 24 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality | Uncertain | Yes | No | Yes | Uncertain | Yes | Adequate |
| Lin | Taiwan: ICU | 100 | SMT vs CPAP | Meeting criteria for ETI during 6 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality | Uncertain | Yes | NR | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
| Takeda | Japan: CU | 30 | SMT vs CPAP | Meeting criteria for ETI during 24 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality | Uncertain | Yes | NR | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
| Takeda | Japan: CU | 22 | SMT vs CPAP | Meeting criteria for ETI during 48 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality | Adequate | Yes | NR | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
| Kelly | Scotland, UK: ED and HDU | 58 | SMT vs CPAP | Meeting criteria for treatment failure; in-hospital mortality | Adequate | Yes | NR | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Inadequate |
| L'Her | France: ED | 89 | SMT vs CPAP | Meeting criteria for ETI or death during 48 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality | Adequate | Yes | NR | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
| Masip | Spain: ED and ICU | 37 | SMT vs NPPV | Meeting criteria for ETI during 10 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence | Adequate | Yes | No | Yes | Uncertain | Yes | Adequate |
| Levitt | USA: ED | 38 | SMT vs NPPV | ETI decided by attending physician during 24 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence. | Adequate | Yes | NR | Uncertain | Uncertain | Yes | Uncertain |
| Nava | Italy: ED | 130 | SMT vs NPPV | Meeting criteria for ETI during 24 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence | Adequate | Yes | NR | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
| Mehta | USA: ED | 27 | CPAP vs NPPV | ETI decided by attending physician during 24 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence | Adequate | Yes | Yesh | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Uncertain |
| Martin-Bermudez | Spain: ED | 80 | CPAP vs NPPV | Meeting criteria for ETI during 24 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence | Uncertain | Yes | NR | Uncertain | Adequate | Yes | Uncertain |
| Bellone | Italy: ED | 46 | CPAP vs NPPV | Meeting criteria for ETI during 36 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence | Adequate | Yes | No | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
| Bellone | Italy: ED | 36 | CPAP vs NPPV | Meeting criteria for ETI during 36 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality | Adequate | Yes | No | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
| Park | Brazil: ED | 26 | SMT vs CPAP vs NPPV | ETI decided by attending physician during 1 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence | Uncertain | Yes | NR | Yes | Uncertain | Yes | Inadequate |
| Park | Brazil: ED | 80 | SMT vs CPAP vs NPPV | ETI decided by attending physician during 24 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence | Adequate | Yes | NR | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Uncertain |
| Crane | UK: ED | 60 | SMT vs CPAP vs NPPV | Meeting criteria for ETI during 2 h follow-up; in-hospital mortality; AMI incidence | Adequate | Yes | No | Yes | Adequate | Yes | Adequate |
aClassified as: adequate, inadequate or uncertain. bClassified as: yes, if inclusion and exclusion criteria for participants are adequately reported; no, if selection criteria are not reported. cClassified as: yes, for articles that implemented blinding at any level; no, for articles reporting not being able to implement blinding of interventions at any level; not reported (NR), for articles that do not make any mention to blinding. dClassified as: yes, if there was an attempt to standardize treatment and care besides the assigned interventions; no, if no attempt to standardize was applied; uncertain, if it was not clearly reported. eClassified as: adequate; inadequate; uncertain. fClassified as: yes; no; not reported (NR). gClassified as: adequate if objective criteria for endotracheal intubation were defined; inadequate if the criteria were not defined; and uncertain if criteria application was unclear (for example, depending on attending physician). hIn this study physicians, nurses and patients were blinded by covering the control panel on the device. AMI, acute myocardial infarction; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure; CU, coronary unit; ED, emergency department; ETI, endotracheal intubation; HDU, high dependency unit; ICU, intensive care unit; NPPV, non-invasive pressure ventilation; SMT, standard medical therapy.
Specific quality criteria of included randomized trials
| Reference | Inclusion criteriaa | Exclusion criteria | Baseline co-morbidity: AMI, COPDb | Intervention in experimental group CPAP | Intervention in experimental group NPPV | Intervention in control group SMTc | Objective criteria for endotracheal intubationd |
| Rasanen | Clinical criteria of APE; RR >25/min; PaO2/FiO2 <200 | COPD; unresponsive; unable to maintain patent airway; lung infection; pulmonary embolism | AMI: control 10/20; CPAP 9/20 COPD: none | CPAP 10 cmH2O face mask plus medical therapy | - | SMT | Adequate Criteria for ETI: PaO2<50 mmHg; PaCO2 > 55 mmHg; RR >35/min; unresponsiveness; airway obstruction |
| Bersten | Clinical criteria of APE; PaO2 < 70 mmHg; PaCO2 > 45 mmHg when O2 8 l/min | AMI and shock; SBP <90 mmHg; stenotic VHD; COPD and CO2 retention | AMI: control 4/20; CPAP 3/19 COPD: none | CPAP 10 cmH2O face mask plus medical therapy | - | SMT | Adequate Criteria for ETI: clinical deterioration; PaO2 < 70 mmHg with O2 100%; PaCO2 > 55 mmHg |
| Lin | Clinical criteria of APE; PaO2/FIO2 = 200–400; P [A-a] O2 > 250 mmHg | Unresponsive; unable to maintain patent airway; shock; septal rupture; stenotic VHD; COPD and CO2 retention | AMI: control 11/50; CPAP 10/50 COPD: none | CPAP face mask titrated up – 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10 and 12.5 cmH2O plus medical therapy | - | SMT (plus dopamine) | Adequate Criteria for ETI: cardiac resuscitation or clinical deterioration and two of the following – PaCO2 > 55 mmHg, PaO2/FiO2 < 200 mmHg, RR >35 |
| Takeda | Clinical criteria of APE; respiratory distress; PaO2 < 80 mmHg while receiving ≥50% O2 | Not reported | AMI: CPAP 5/15; Control 6/15 COPD: none | CPAP 4–10 cmH2O nasal mask plus medical therapy | - | SMT (plus dopamine, dobutamine, norepinephrine and digitalis) | Adequate Criteria for ETI: clinical deterioration and PaO2/FiO2 <100 mmHg (with FiO2 ≥70%), PaCO2 >55 mmHg |
| Takeda | Clinical criteria of APE; PaO2 < 80 mmHg | Shock; septal or ventricular rupture | All 22 patients with AMI admitted to the coronary unit | CPAP 4–10 cmH2O nasal mask plus medical therapy | - | SMT (plus dopamine, dobutamine, norepinephrine) | Adequate Criteria for ETI: clinical deterioration and PaO2/FiO2 <100 mmHg (with FiO2 ≥70%) PaCO2 >55 mmHg |
| Kelly | Clinical criteria of APE; RR > 20/min | Pneumonia; pneumothorax; pre-hospital treatment with interventions other than oxygen, diuretics or opiates | AMI: not reported COPD: not reported | CPAP 7.5 cmH2O face mask plus medical therapy | - | SMT | Inadequate Criteria for treatment failure: need for intubation (no defined criteria), hypoxemia or hypercapnia and respiratory distress |
| L'Her, | Clinical criteria of APE Age >75 years; PaO2/FiO2 <300 mmHg, RR >25/min | GCS <7; Sat O2 <85%; SBP <90 mmHg); chronic respiratory insufficiency | AMI: not reported (acute ischemic heart disease: control 6/46; CPAP 7/43) COPD: none | Face mask CPAP 7.5 cmH2O plus medical therapy | - | SMT | Adequate Serious complications considered as death or need for ETI within 48 h. Criteria for ETI: cardiac or respiratory arrest; SBP <80 mmHg; progressive hypoxemia (Sat O2 <92%); coma or seizures; agitation |
| Masip | Clinical criteria of APE | AMI; pneumonia; SBP <90 mmHg; CRF; immediate intubation; neurological deterioration | AMI: control 6/18; NPPV 5/19 COPD: control 7/18; NPPV 3/19 | - | NPPV face mask, PEEP 5 cmH2O, plus medical therapy PSV 15.2 ± 2.4 cmH2O | SMT | Adequate Criteria for ETI: cardiac or respiratory arrest, hypoxemia (Sat O2 <80%) and muscles fatigue |
| Levitt | Clinical criteria of APE; RR >30/min | Immediate need for intubation; radiograph not compatible with APE | AMI: none COPD: not reported | - | NPPV S/T mode, face or nasal mask, initial IPAP of 8 and EPAP of 3 cmH2O, pressure support of 5 cmH2O plus medical therapy PSV 5.0 cmH2O | SMT | Uncertain Decision by attending physician based on the following criteria: respiratory distress, deterioration in mental status or vital signs, PaO2 <60 mmHg, PaCO2 >50 mmHg |
| Nava | Clinical criteria of APE; PaO2/FiO2 < 250; RR >30/min | AMI needing thrombolysis; immediate need for intubation; Kelly score >3; shock; arrhythmias; SpO2<80%; severe CRF; pneumothorax | AMI: control 11/65; NPPV 11/65 COPD: control 26/65; NPPV 27/65 | - | NPPV S mode face mask IPAP 14.5 ± 21.1 cmH2O, EPAP: 6.1 ± 3.2 cmH2O plus medical therapy PSV 8.4 cmH2O | SMT | Adequate Sat O2 <85% with FiO2 100%, cardiac or respiratory arrest, inability to tolerate mask, PaCO2 >50 mmHg, signs of pump exhaustion, SBP <90 mmHg, AMI, massive GI bleeding |
| Mehta | Clinical criteria of APE; RR >30/min; tachycardia >100 bpm; without pulmonary aspiration or infection | Immediate need for intubation; respiratory or cardiac arrest; arrhythmias; SBP <90 mmHg; unresponsive; agitated; condition precluding use of face mask | AMI: CPAP 1/13; NPPV 1/14 Chest pain: CPAP 4/13; NPPV 10/14; COPD: not reported | CPAP 10 cmH2O nose/face mask plus medical therapy | NPPV S/T mode, nasal/face mask, IPAP 15 cmH2O, EPAP 5 cmH2O, plus medical therapy PSV 10.0 cmH2O | - | Uncertain Decision by attending physician based on the following criteria: severe respiratory distress, inability to tolerate mask, unstable vital signs, PaO2 <60 mmHg or increase PaCO2 >5 mmHg |
| Martin-Bermudez, | Clinical criteria of APE; RR >25/min; Sat O2 <90% | Not reported | AMI: not reported COPD: not reported | Face mask CPAP plus medical therapy | Face mask NPPV plus medical therapy PSV uncertain | - | Uncertain |
| Bellone | Clinical criteria of APE; Sat O2 <90%; RR >30/min | Acute coronary syndrome; immediate need for intubation; respiratory or cardiac arrest; SBP <90 mmHg; unresponsive, agitated or unable to cooperate; condition precluding use of face mask | AMI: none COPD: CPAP 8/22; NPPV 6/24 | Face mask CPAP 10 cmH2O plus medical therapy | Face mask NPPV initially IPAP 15 cmH2O and EPAP 5 cmH2O, with adjustments as needed to obtain tidal volume >400 ml plus medical therapy PSV 10.0 cmH2O | - | Adequate Respiratory arrest; loss of consciousness; agitation; heart rate <50/min, SBP <70 mmHg |
| Bellone | Clinical criteria of APE; PaCO2 > 45 mmHg; Sat O2 <90%; RR >30/min | COPD; PaCO2 <45 mmHg; immediate need for intubation; respiratory or cardiac arrest; SBP <90 mmHg; CRF; agitated; condition precluding use of face mask; enrolled in other study | AMI: CPAP 0/18; NPPV 2/18 COPD: none | Face mask CPAP 10 cmH2O plus medical therapy | Face mask NPPV initially IPAP 15 cmH2O, EPAP 5 cmH2O, adjustments to obtain tidal volume >400 ml plus medical therapy PSV 10.0 cmH2O | - | Adequate Respiratory arrest; loss of consciousness; agitation; heart rate <50/min, SBP <70 mmHg |
| Park | Clinical criteria of APE; RR >25/min | COPD; SBP <90 mmHg; arrhythmias; bradypnea; unresponsive, agitated or unable to cooperate; vomiting; digestive hemorrhage; facial deformities | AMI: control 2/10; CPAP 1/9; NPPV 1/7 COPD: none | Face mask CPAP mean 7.5 cmH2O, initially 5, increased by 2.5, maximum 12.5 cmH2O, plus medical therapy | NPPV S/T mode nasal mask, IPAP 12 cmH2O, EPAP 4 cmH2O, plus medical therapy PSV 8.0 cmH2O | SMT | Inadequate Decision made by the attending physician based on clinical and laboratory findings |
| Park | Clinical criteria of APE; RR >25/min | AMI; COPD; pulmonary embolism; pneumonia; pneumothorax; SBP <90 mmHg; vomiting | AMI: control 3/26; CPAP 1/27; NPPV 1/27 COPD: none | Face mask CPAP initially 11 ± 2 cmH2O plus medical therapy | Face mask NPPV, IPAP 17 ± 2 cmH2O, EPAP 11 ± 2 cmH2O, plus medical therapy PSV 6.0 cmH2O | SMT | Uncertain Decision made by the attending physician based on the following criteria: GCS <13, respiratory distress, PaO2 <60 mmHg, Sat O2 <90%, increase PaCO2 >5 mmHg |
| Crane | Clinical criteria of APE; RR >23/min; pH <7.35 | SBP <90 mmHg; temperature >38°C; AMI with thrombolysis; dialysis for CRF; impaired consciousness; dementia | AMI: none COPD: control 6/20; CPAP 3/20; NPPV 7/20 | Face mask CPAP 10 cmH O plus medical therapy | Face mask NPPV IPAP 15 cmH2O, EPAP 5 cmH2O plus medical therapy PSV 10.0 cmH2O | SMT | Adequate RR >40 or <10 and reduced consciousness; falling pH (<7.2) |
aClinical criteria of APE: existence of dyspnea of sudden onset, bilateral pulmonary infiltrates on chest radiograph and a compatible physical examination (bilateral crackles on pulmonary auscultation, elevated jugular venous pressure, third heart sound on cardiac auscultation). bData on baseline frequency of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are presented as number of patients with co-morbidity/total number of patients in the assigned group. cStandard medical therapy was defined as: O2 by face mask, nitro-glycerin, nitroprusside, furosemide and morphine. Other interventions described in managing these patients will be specifically indicated. dClassified as: adequate if objective criteria for endotracheal intubation were defined; inadequate if the criteria were not defined; and uncertain if criteria application was unclear (for example, depending on attending physician). APE, acute pulmonary edema; bpm, beats per minute; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure; CRF, chronic renal failure; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; EPAP, expiratory positive airway pressure; ETI, endotracheal intubation; FiO2, O2 inspired fraction; GI, Gastrointestinal; GCS, Glasgow coma scale; IPAP, inspiratory positive airway pressure; NPPV, non-invasive pressure ventilation; P [A-a], arterial/alveolar partial pressure differential; PaCO2, CO2 partial pressure; PaO2, O2 partial pressure; PEEP, positive end expiratory pressure; PSV, pressure support ventilation; RR, respiratory rate; Sat O2, O2 saturation; SBP, systolic blood pressure; S mode, spontaneous mode; SMT, standard medical therapy; SpO2, pulse oximetry oxygen saturation; S/T mode, spontaneous/timed mode; VHD, valvular heart disease.
Figure 2Results and pooled analysis of absolute risk differences (RDs) for the outcomes (a) need for endotracheal intubation, (b) mortality and (c) acute myocardial infarction in trials comparing continuous positive airway pressure ventilation (CPAP) versus medical therapy in acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema patients.
Figure 3Results and pooled analysis of absolute risk differences (RDs) for the outcomes (a) need for endotracheal intubation, (b) mortality and (c) acute myocardial infarction in trials comparing non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) versus medical therapy in acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema patients.
Figure 4Results and pooled analysis of absolute risk differences (RDs) for the outcomes (a) need for endotracheal intubation, (b) mortality and (c) acute myocardial infarction in trials comparing of continuous positive airway pressure ventilation (CPAP) versus non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) in acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema patients patients.
Figure 5Results and pooled analysis of absolute risk differences (RDs) for the outcomes (a) need for endotracheal intubation, (b) mortality and (c) acute myocardial infarction in trials comparing of continuous positive airway pressure ventilation (CPAP) versus non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) in acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema patients patients. Subgroup analysis with stratification by baseline PaCO2 level.
Figure 6Funnel plots with effect measures (risk difference (RD)) as a function of its standard error (SE) for the outcome endotracheal intubation in trials comparing (a) continuous positive airway pressure ventilation (CPAP) versus medical therapy; (b) non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) versus medical therapy and CPAP versus NPPV.