| Literature DB >> 30560440 |
Laurent Poiroux1, Lise Piquilloud2, Valérie Seegers3, Cyril Le Roy4, Karine Colonval5, Carole Agasse6, Vanessa Zinzoni7, Vanessa Hodebert8, Alexandre Cambonie9, Josselin Saletes10, Irma Bourgeon11, François Beloncle4, Alain Mercat4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The clinical interest of using bubble humidification of oxygen remains controversial. This study was designed to further explore whether delivering dry oxygen instead of bubble-moistened oxygen had an impact on discomfort of ICU patients.Entities:
Keywords: Bubble humidification; Intensive care units; Nursing assessment; Oxygen therapy; Patient comfort
Year: 2018 PMID: 30560440 PMCID: PMC6297119 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-018-0472-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Fig. 1Study flowchart. NIV noninvasive ventilation, HHFOT humidified high flow oxygen therapy, ICU intensive care unit
Patients’ characteristics, reasons for intensive care unit (ICU) admission and past medical history
| Characteristics | Humidified oxygen therapy | Non-humidified oxygen therapy |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years), median (IQR) | 64 (51–77) | 63.5 (54.25–74) |
| Male sex, | 94 (69.1%) | 91 (64.1%) |
| Previous use of oxygen in hospital before ICU admission, | 90 (66.2%) | 103 (72.5%) |
| Previous use of oxygen at home, | 3 (2.2%) | 8 (5.7%) |
| Reasons for ICU admission | ||
| Respiratory failure, | 50 (36.8%) | 39 (27.5%) |
| Cardiac failure/lung edema, | 2 (1.5%) | 12 (8.5%) |
| Sepsis, | 34 (25.0%) | 39 (27.5%) |
| Renal and metabolic failure, | 15 (11.0%) | 15 (10.6%) |
| Others, | 35 (25.7%) | 37 (26.1%) |
| Illness potentially influencing evaluation of discomfort score | ||
| ENT cancer, | 5 (3.7%) | 5 (3.5%) |
| Sjögren’s syndrome, | 0 (0%) | 1 (0.7%) |
| Past cervical or facial radiotherapy, | 4 (2.9%) | 4 (2.8%) |
| Past or current tobacco use, | 67 (49.3%) | 64 (45.4%) |
ENT ear, nose and throat, HO humidified oxygen, NHO non-humidified oxygen
Fig. 2Absolute difference (with confidence interval) between the 15-item comfort scores at H6–H8 after randomization between humidified oxygen (HO) and non-humidified (NHO) oxygen. The non-inferiority margin was within the 90% CI of the absolute difference, meaning that the non-inferiority analysis was not conclusive
Fig. 3Absolute difference (with confidence interval) between the 15-item comfort scores at H24 after randomization between humidified oxygen (HO) and non-humidified (NHO) oxygen. NHO was non-inferior compared to HO in terms of comfort at H24
Effects of humidification strategy according to oxygen flow rate (non-inferiority analyses) at H6–H8 and H24 (per protocol analysis)
| Oxygen flows | Results presentation | HO group comfort score | NHO group comfort score | Absolute difference between NHO group mean score and HO group mean score | Relative difference between NHO group mean score and HO group mean score | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ≤4 L/min | Mean ± SDa | 26.1 ± 19.4 | 27.9 ± 22.2 | + 1.8 [− 2.0; + 5.5] | + 6.9 [− 7.7; + 21.1] | Non-conclusive |
| Median [IQR] | 21 [10.8; 37.5] | 22 [11; 38.5] | ||||
| >4 L/min | Mean ± SDa | 29.3 ± 22.1 | 33.9 ± 24.2 | + 4.6 [− 1.6; + 10.8] | + 15.7 [− 5.5; + 36.9] | Non-conclusive |
| Median [IQR] | 22.5 [17.8; 36.5] | 25 [18.5; 45] | ||||
| ≤4 L/min | Mean ± SDa | 29.6 ± 19.7 | 24.8 ± 21.0 | − 4.8 [− 9.1; − 0.5] | − 16.2 [− 30.7; − 1.7] | Non-inferiority |
| Median [IQR] | 25.5 [13.5; 42.8] | 21 [12; 34] | ||||
| >4 L/min | Mean ± SDa | 23.8 ± 16.6 | 36.4 ± 19.5 | + 12.6 [+ 4.9; + 20.4] | + 52.9 [+ 20.6; + 85.7] | Non-conclusive |
| Median [IQR] | 21 [12; 34] | 33 [18.5; 43.5] |
HO humidified oxygen, NHO non-humidified oxygen, CI confidence interval
aFor non-inferiority analysis
Fig. 4Relative difference (with confidence interval) between non-humidified oxygen (NHO) group mean score and humidified oxygen (HO) group mean score at H6–H8 and H24