| Literature DB >> 32157356 |
Marc Leone1, Sharon Einav2, Davide Chiumello3,4,5, Jean-Michel Constantin6, Edoardo De Robertis7, Marcelo Gama De Abreu8, Cesare Gregoretti9, Samir Jaber10, Salvatore Maurizio Maggiore11,12, Paolo Pelosi13,14, Massimiliano Sorbello15, Arash Afshari16.
Abstract
Hypoxaemia is a potential life-threatening yet common complication in the peri-operative and periprocedural patient (e.g. during an invasive procedure at risk of deterioration of gas exchange, such as bronchoscopy). The European Society of Anaesthesiology (ESA) and the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM) developed guidelines for the use of noninvasive respiratory support techniques in the hypoxaemic patient in the peri-operative and periprocedural period. The panel outlined five clinical questions regarding treatment with noninvasive respiratory support techniques [conventional oxygen therapy (COT), high flow nasal cannula, noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)] for hypoxaemic patients with acute peri-operative/periprocedural respiratory failure. The goal was to assess the available literature on the various noninvasive respiratory support techniques, specifically studies that included adult participants with hypoxaemia in the peri-operative/periprocedural period. The literature search strategy was developed by a Cochrane Anaesthesia and Intensive Care trial search specialist in close collaboration with the panel members and the ESA group methodologist. The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) system was used to assess the level of evidence and to grade recommendations. The final process was then validated by both ESA and ESICM scientific committees. Among 19 recommendations, the two grade 1B recommendations state that: in the peri-operative/periprocedural hypoxaemic patient, the use of either NIPPV or CPAP (based on local expertise) is preferred to COT for improvement of oxygenation; and that the panel suggests using NIPPV or CPAP immediately post-extubation for hypoxaemic patients at risk of developing acute respiratory failure after abdominal surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Hypoxaemia; Peri-operative; Periprocedural; Ventilation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32157356 PMCID: PMC7223056 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-020-05948-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Search results for each PICO
| Medline | Embase | Central | Cinahl | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PICO 1 | 604 | 1281 | 295 | 262 | 2442 |
| PICO 2 | 303 | 983 | 101 | 111 | 1498 |
| PICO 3 | 245 | 666 | 111 | 81 | 1103 |
| PICO 4 | 528 | 1578 | 226 | 182 | 2514 |
| PICO 5 | 2096 | 4998 | 474 | 714 | 8282 |
| Number | Recommendation | Grade |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| R1 | In the peri-operative/periprocedural hypoxaemic patient, the use of either NIPPV or CPAP (based on local expertise) is preferred to COT to improve oxygenation | 1B |
| R2 | In the postoperative hypoxaemic patient after cardiac surgery, we suggest using NIPPV rather than CPAP to reduce the risk of atelectasis | 2C |
| R3 | In the postoperative hypoxaemic patient after upper abdominal surgery, we suggest CPAP or NIPPV rather than COT to reduce the risk of hospital-acquired pneumonia and its associated complications | 2A |
| R4 | In the peri-operative/periprocedural hypoxaemic patient, either NIPPV or CPAP are preferred over COT to prevent reintubation | 2B |
| R5 | In the peri-operative/periprocedural hypoxaemic patient, we suggest to use NIPPV rather than COT to reduce mortality | 2C |
|
| ||
| R6 | NIPPV or CPAP immediately post-extubation for hypoxaemic patients at risk of developing acute respiratory failure after abdominal surgery | 1B |
| R7 | NIPPV or CPAP may be considered for prevention of further respiratory deterioration in hypoxaemic patients after cardiac surgery | 2B |
| R8 | HFNC may be considered for hypoxaemic patients after cardiac surgery | 2C |
| R9 | NIPPV may be considered for prevention of atelectasis in hypoxaemic patients after lung resection | 2C |
| R10 | NIPPV in hypoxaemic patients after solid organ transplantation | 2C |
| R11 | In the hypoxaemic patient requiring bronchoscopy, we suggest using noninvasive respiratory support techniques rather than COT | 2B |
|
| ||
| R12 | We suggest that peri-operative/periprocedural hypoxaemic patients undergoing NIPPV should be treated by clinicians with recognised competence and skill in airway management and ventilation of patients with lung injury | 2C |
| R13 | We suggest that peri-operative/periprocedural patients treated with noninvasive respiratory support techniques be examined periodically for signs of respiratory distress, neurological deterioration and interface intolerance by a clinician with recognised competence and skill in airway management and ventilation of patients with lung injury | 2C |
| R14 | We suggest that peri-operative/periprocedural hypoxaemic patients undergoing NIPPV undergo continuous physiological monitoring including pulse oximetry, blood pressure measurement and electrocardiography. When a closed NIPPV technique is being used, we suggest adding monitoring of flow and pressure ventilation waveforms | 2C |
| R15 | In peri-operative/periprocedural hypoxaemic patients treated with a noninvasive respiratory support technique, we suggest periodic arterial blood gas sampling after the first hour of treatment, at least every 6 h during the first 24 h and then daily until the end of the treatment | 2C |
| R16 | We cannot provide a recommendation regarding the need for routine imaging. However, in the presence of an appropriate clinical indication, lung imaging should be considered during NIPPV treatment in hypoxaemic peri-operative/periprocedural patients | |
|
| ||
| R17 | The expert panel identified no studies addressing means of prevention of complications and therefore decided to refrain from issuing a recommendation on this topic | |
| R18 | We suggest using a HFNC rather than conventional oxygen therapy in peri-operative/periprocedural hypoxaemic patients with low tolerance to other forms of noninvasive respiratory support techniques | 2B |
|
| ||
| R19 | The expert panel identified no studies addressing this query and therefore decided to refrain from issuing a recommendation on this topic | |
COT conventional oxygen therapy, CPAP continuous positive airway pressure, HFNC high flow nasal cannula, NIPPV noninvasive positive pressure ventilation