| Literature DB >> 29058607 |
Jonathan Dugernier1,2,3, Stephan Ehrmann4,5,6, Thierry Sottiaux7, Jean Roeseler8, Xavier Wittebole8, Thierry Dugernier9, François Jamar10, Pierre-François Laterre8, Gregory Reychler11,12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This systematic review aimed to assess inhaled drug delivery in mechanically ventilated patients or in animal models. Whole lung and regional deposition and the impact of the ventilator circuit, the artificial airways and the administration technique for aerosol delivery were analyzed.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotics; Bronchodilators; Nebulizer; Scintigraphy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29058607 PMCID: PMC5651640 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-017-1844-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Inclusion criteria for studies according PICOS
| Participants | Adult aged 18 years or older with invasive mechanical ventilation |
| or in vivo experimental model of adult invasive mechanical ventilation | |
| Interventions | Aerosol administration using any type of device (nebulizer, metered-dose inhaled, dry powder inhaler, etc.) |
| Aerosol deposition assessment using pharmacokinetics or radioisotopic methods | |
| Outcomes | Pulmonary deposition of inhaled drug (dose, distribution or penetration) |
| Extrapulmonary deposition, if available | |
| Study designs | RCT, randomized comparative, crossover or cohort studies |
PICOS participants, interventions, comparisons, outcomes and study design, RCT randomized controlled trial
Fig. 1Flow diagram for study selection according to Moher et al. [11] AT aerosol therapy, IMV invasive mechanical ventilation
Drugs of interest
| Drugs | |
|---|---|
| Antibiotics | Amikacin and amikacin sulfate [ |
| Tracer labeled with technetium-99 m | Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid [ |
| Bronchodilators | Albuterol [ |
| Other | Cisplatin [ |
Fig. 2Anteroposterior acquisition using planar scintigraphy for radiolabeled aerosol deposition assessment in an intubated patient after open-heart surgery (from Thomas et al. [37], with permission) (a), a tracheotomised critically ill patient (from O’Riordan et al. [35], with permission) (b) and three intubated neurosurgical patients ventilated in volume control mode (from Dugernier et al. [18] with permission) (c). Even if lung outlines suggested that inhaled drugs reached the lung periphery, these images illustrate that the majority of drugs impacted proximally in the artificial airways and particularly in the trachea and large bronchi. High deposition in the endotracheal tube, the trachea and the main bronchi has been masked to improve lung definition (a)
Fig. 3Extrapulmonary deposition expressed as percentage of nominal dose of nebulized drugs (Neb) during invasive mechanical ventilation. O’Riordan et al. [35] reported drug percentage trapped in the endotracheal tube during inspiration only (7% of nominal dose was exhaled particles trapped during expiration). This was not differentiated in other studies. *Drug deposition in the inspiratory limb only, the expiratory limb was not included. †Drug retention in the nebulizer reservoir, the T-piece and the Y-piece. ‡Drug deposition in the endotracheal tube, the trachea and main bronchi
Practical recommendations to improve inhaled drug deposition with nebulizers
| Using vibrating-mesh nebulizers with minimal drug retention and no risk of protein denaturation as observed with ultrasonic nebulizers [ |
| Promoting inspiratory synchronized nebulizers [ |
| Combining an inhalation chamber with constant-output nebulizers (to be confirmed in further studies) [ |
| Generating aerosol particles in a dry circuita [ |
| Controlling the breathing pattern (high Tinsp/TTOT
a, low inspiratory flow) in volume control mode [ |
| Using a helium-oxygen mixture as inhaled gas [ |
aProbably not relevant with a recent prototype of inspiratory synchronized vibrating-mesh nebulizer, as suggested by Luyt et al. [27]