| Literature DB >> 21481251 |
Barbara S Niël-Weise1, Petra Gastmeier, Axel Kola, Ralf P Vonberg, Jan C Wille, Peterhans J van den Broek.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: A semi-upright position in ventilated patients is recommended to prevent ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) and is one of the components in the Ventilator Bundle of the Institute for Health Care Improvement. This recommendation, however, is not an evidence-based one.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21481251 PMCID: PMC3219392 DOI: 10.1186/cc10135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Study populations, interventions and definition of VAP
| Study | Study participants (number of patients randomized) | Treatment (T) and Control (C) groups (number of patients analyzed) | Duration of ICU ventilation | Outcomes | Baseline risks, % | End of study protocol |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drakulovic and colleagues [ | Respiratory and medical ICU patients (90). Excluded: previous endotracheal intubation (<30 days); recent abdominal surgery; recent neurosurgical intervention; hemodynamic instability | T (39), 45°; C (47), 0°. Correctness of the position was checked once a day | Mean: T, 145 hours (SD 149); C, 171 hours (SD 167) | Clinically suspected VAP, defined as new and persistent infiltrate on chest radiography and at least two of the following three criteria: fever; leucopenia or leucocytosis; purulent tracheal secretions: T, 3/39; C, 16/47 | Clinically suspected VAP: 34% | End of study protocol: (1) first weaning trial, (2) extubation, (3) death, (4) permanent change in body position for more than 45 minutes |
| Microbiologically confirmed VAP, defined as clinical suspicion and positive ETS, BAL or PSB: T, 2/39; C, 11/47 | Microbiologically confirmed VAP: 23% | Follow-up for an additional 72 hours after the study end point has been reached | ||||
| ICU mortality: T, 7/39; C, 13/47 | For ICU mortality: 28% | |||||
| Keeley [ | Adult ventilated patients with no contraindications for raised head of bed (56). Excluded: previous endotracheal intubation (<30 days); recent abdominal surgery with vacuum dressing; severe obesitas; hemodynamic instability; renal replacement therapy; pregnancy; spinal surgery or trauma | T (17), 45°; C (13), 25°. Authors did not report whether correctness of the position was checked during the study | Meana: T, 3.8 days; C, 5.1 days | Clinically suspected VAP, defined as new and persistent infiltrate on chest radiography and at least two of the following three criteria: fever; leucopenia or leucocytosis; purulent tracheal secretions: T, 1/17; C, 2/13 | Clinically suspected VAP: 15% | End of study protocol: (1) first successful weaning trial, (2) extubation, (3) death |
| Microbiologically confirmed VAP, defined as clinical suspicion and positive ETS, BAL or PSB: T, 4/17; C, 5/13 | Microbiologically confirmed VAP: 38% | Follow-up for an additional 72 hours after the study end point has been reached | ||||
| In-hospital mortality: T, 5/17; C, 4/13 | In-hospital mortality: 31% | |||||
| van Nieuwenhoven and colleagues [ | Adult ventilated patients with no contraindications for raised head of bed and an expected duration of ventilation >48 hours (221). Excluded: selective decontamination of the digestive tract; trauma of the pelvic region; extensive abdominal surgery; neurosurgical patients treated with 30° head elevation; patients cared for in beds without the possibility of altering backrest elevation | T (112), 45°; C (109), 10°. Backrest elevation was measured every 60 seconds by means of a transducer with pendulum. A dedicated nurse controlled patient position two or three times daily and restored backrest elevation to the randomized position when possible | Median: T, 6 (0 to 281) days; C, 6 (0 to 64) days | Clinically suspected VAP, defined as new or persistent or progressive radiographic infiltrate with at least two of the following criteria: temperature >38°C or <35°C; leucopenia or leucocytosis; positive cultures of tracheal aspirate: T, 16/112; C, 20/109 | Clinically suspected VAP: 18% | End of study protocol: (1) extubation, (2) death, (3) patients were placed in a bed without the possibility to alter backrest elevation, (4) VAP |
| Microbiologically confirmed pneumonia, defined as clinical suspicion and positive BAL or positive blood culture with the same microorganisms as in tracheal aspirate: T, 13/11; C, 8/109 | Microbiologically confirmed VAP: 7% | Authors did not report whether there was a follow-up for an additional 72 hours after the study end point has been reached | ||||
| ICU mortality: T, 33/112; C, 33/109 | ICU mortality: 30% | |||||
| Pressure soreb: T, 31/112c; C, 33/109c | ||||||
| Feasibility of the allocated positiond |
BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; ETS, tracheobronchial aspirate; PSB, protected specimen brush; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia. aStandard deviation (SD) could not be calculated; authors did not supply additional information. bPressure sore was staged daily to the four stages described by the National Ulcer Advisory Panel System [23]. cMost patients had stage 1 or stage 2 pressure sores. dThe targeted 45° head of bed elevation was not reached.
Figure 1Summary estimates of associations between treatment and control groups: clinically suspected ventilator-associated pneumonia. GRADE Working Group grades of evidence: high quality, further research is very unlikely to change confidence in the estimate of effect; moderate quality, further research is likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate; low quality, further research is very likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate; very low quality, the estimate effect is very uncertain. CI, confidence interval; M-H, Mantel Haenszel test; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia.
Figure 2Summary estimates of associations between treatment and control group: microbiologically confirmed ventilator-associated pneumonia. GRADE Working Group grades of evidence: high quality, further research is very unlikely to change confidence in the estimate of effect; moderate quality, further research is likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate; low quality, further research is very likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate; very low quality, the estimate effect is very uncertain. CI, confidence interval; M-H, Mantel Haenszel test; VAP, ventilator-associated pneumonia.
Figure 3Summary estimates of associations between treatment and control group: ICU mortality. GRADE Working Group grades of evidence: high quality, further research is very unlikely to change confidence in the estimate of effect; moderate quality, further research is likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate; low quality, further research is very likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate; very low quality, the estimate effect is very uncertain. CI, confidence interval; M-H, Mantel Haenszel test.
Figure 4Summary estimates of associations between treatment and control group: pressure sores. GRADE Working Group grades of evidence: high quality, further research is very unlikely to change confidence in the estimate of effect; moderate quality, further research is likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate; low quality, further research is very likely to have an important impact on confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate; very low quality, the estimate effect is very uncertain. CI, confidence interval; M-H, Mantel Haenszel test.
Recommendation on bed head elevation with its rationale
| Considering that (RATIONALE): |
| 1. based on the results of the systematic review, |
| • it is uncertain whether a 45° bed head elevation is effective or harmful with regard to the occurrence of clinically suspected VAP, microbiologically confirmed VAP, decubitus and mortality; |
| • it is unknown whether a 45° bed head elevation for 24 hours a day causes thromboembolism or hemodynamic instability; |
| 2. maintaining a semi-upright position for 24 hours a day may cause conflict with other nursing tasks or medical interventions like insertion of intravascular catheters, providing good hygiene to the patient, prevention of decubitus, intensive physiotherapy or wound care, so that semi-upright position must be abandoned; |
| 3. there are absolute contraindications to nursing mechanically ventilated patients in a semi-upright position - that is, patients with recent thoracic or lumbar surgery of the spine and patients with thoracic or lumbar spine injury; |
| 4. there are a relative large number of mechanically ventilated patients with relative contraindications where caution is indicated when the patient is placed in a semi-upright position - that is, patients with hemodynamic instability; trauma of the pelvic region; and severe sacral decubitus; |
| 5. besides the possible prevention of VAP, |
| a) semi-upright position of ventilated patients, |
| • might improve oxygenation and ventilation; |
| • decreases facial edema; |
| b) semi-upright position of awake ventilated patients, |
| • might promote easier communication between patients and relatives or staff, better orientation in the room and more effective coughing; |
| 6. |
| • semi-uptight position of ventilated patients interferes with the prevention of decubitus - that is, changing position frequently; |
| • patients glide away to the foot end of the bed when using anti-decubitus mattresses; |
| 7. the wish of awake patients to change body position regularly should be respected. |
| 8. the intervention is no cost; |
| European experts in intensive medicine CONCLUDE that the recommendation should not be compelling, because the prevention of VAP is uncertain and the balance between benefits and harms is unknown, and maintaining semi-upright position interferes with other nursing tasks or with medical interventions. |
| The experts RECOMMEND to elevate the head of the bed of mechanically ventilated patients to a 20 to 45° position and preferably in a ≥30° position as long as it is does not pose risks and conflicts with other nursing tasks, medical interventions or with patients' wishes. |
VAP: ventilator-associated pneumonia.