| Literature DB >> 32222812 |
Waleed Alhazzani1,2, Morten Hylander Møller3,4, Yaseen M Arabi5, Mark Loeb1,2, Michelle Ng Gong6, Eddy Fan7, Simon Oczkowski1,2, Mitchell M Levy8,9, Lennie Derde10,11, Amy Dzierba12, Bin Du13, Michael Aboodi6, Hannah Wunsch14,15, Maurizio Cecconi16,17, Younsuck Koh18, Daniel S Chertow19, Kathryn Maitland20, Fayez Alshamsi21, Emilie Belley-Cote1,22, Massimiliano Greco16,17, Matthew Laundy23, Jill S Morgan24, Jozef Kesecioglu10, Allison McGeer25, Leonard Mermel8, Manoj J Mammen26, Paul E Alexander2,27, Amy Arrington28, John E Centofanti29, Giuseppe Citerio30,31, Bandar Baw1,32, Ziad A Memish33, Naomi Hammond34,35, Frederick G Hayden36, Laura Evans37, Andrew Rhodes38.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the cause of a rapidly spreading illness, Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), affecting thousands of people around the world. Urgent guidance for clinicians caring for the sickest of these patients is needed.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Clinical practice guidelines; Coronavirus; Critical illness; SARS CoV-2
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32222812 PMCID: PMC7101866 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-020-06022-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1COVID-19 guideline development process
Implications of different recommendations to key stakeholders
| Recommendation | Meaning | Implications to patients | Implications to clinicians | Implications to policymakers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Strong recommendation or Best practice statement | Must do or Must avoid | Almost all individuals in this situation would want the recommended intervention, and only a small proportion would not want it | Most individuals should receive the recommended course of action | Can be adapted as policy in most situations, including the use as performance indicators |
| Weak recommendation | Consider doing or Consider avoiding | The majority of individuals in this situation would want the recommended intervention, but many would not | Different choices are likely to be appropriate for different patients, and the recommendation should be tailored to the individual patient’s circumstances. Such as patients’, family’s, or substitute decision maker’s values and preferences | Policies will likely be variable |
Recommendations and statements
| Recommendation | Strength | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | For healthcare workers performing | Best practice statement |
| 2 | We | Best practice statement |
| 3 | For healthcare workers providing usual care for non-ventilated COVID-19 patients, we | Weak |
| 4 | For healthcare workers who are performing | Weak |
| 5 | For healthcare workers performing | Weak |
| 6 | For COVID-19 patients requiring | Best practice statement |
| 7.1 | For intubated and mechanically ventilated adults with suspicion of COVID-19: For diagnostic testing, we | Weak |
| 7.2 | For intubated and mechanically ventilated adults with suspicion of COVID-19: With regard to lower respiratory samples, we | Weak |
| 8 | In adults with | Weak |
| 9 | For the | Weak |
| 10 | For the | Weak |
| 11 | For the | Weak |
| 12 | For the | Strong |
| 13 | For the | Weak |
| 14 | For the | Weak |
| 15 | For the | Weak |
| 16 | For adults with | Weak |
| 17 | If norepinephrine is not available, we | Weak |
| 18 | For adults with | Strong |
| 19 | For adults with | Weak |
| 20 | For adults with | Weak |
| 21 | For adults with | Weak |
| 22 | For adults with | Weak |
| 23 | In adults with COVID-19, we | Weak Strong |
| 24 | In adults with COVID-19 and | Strong |
| 25 | For adults with COVID-19 and | Weak |
| 26 | In adults with COVID-19 and | Weak |
| 27 | In adults with COVID-19 and | Weak |
| 28 | No recommendation | |
| 29 | In adults with COVID-19 receiving NIPPV or HFNC, we | Best practice statement |
| 30 | In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and ARDS, we | Strong |
| 31 | For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and | Strong |
| 32 | For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and moderate to severe ARDS, we | Strong |
| 33 | For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and ARDS, we | Weak |
| 34 | For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and | Weak |
| 35.1 | For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and | Weak |
| 35.2 | In the event of persistent ventilator dyssynchrony, the need for ongoing deep sedation, prone ventilation, or persistently high plateau pressures, we | Weak |
| 36 | In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 ARDS, we | Weak |
| 37 | In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19, severe ARDS and hypoxemia despite optimizing ventilation and other rescue strategies, we | Weak |
| 38 | For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and hypoxemia despite optimizing ventilation, we | Weak |
| 39 | If recruitment maneuvers are used, we | Strong |
| 40 | In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and refractory hypoxemia despite optimizing ventilation, use of rescue therapies, and proning, we | Weak |
| 41 | In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and respiratory failure ( | Weak |
| 42 | In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 | Weak |
| 43 | In mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19 and respiratory failure, we | Weak |
| 44 | For critically ill adults with COVID-19 who develop fever, we | Weak |
| 45 | In critically ill adults with COVID-19, we | Weak |
| 46 | In critically ill adults with COVID-19, we | Weak |
| 47.1 | In critically ill adults with COVID-19: we | Weak |
| 47.2 | No recommendation | |
| 48 | No recommendation | |
| 49 | No recommendation | |
| 50 | No recommendation | |
Epidemiological characteristics in recent COVID-19 reports
| Study | n | ICU admission (%) | Cardiac Injury (%) | Shock (%) | NIPPV (%) | Invasive MV (%) | CFR (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huang et al. [ | 41 | 32 | 12 | 7 | 24 | 5 | 15 |
| Chen et al. [ | 99 | 23 | – | 4 | 13 | 4 | 11 |
| Wang et al. [ | 138 | 26 | 7 | 9 | 11 | 12 | – |
| Guan et al. [ | 1099 | – | – | 1 | 5.1 | 2.3 | 1 |
| Yang et al. [ | 52 | 100 | 23 | 35 | 55.8 | 42.3 | 62 |
| Zhou et al. [ | 191 | 26 | 17 | 20 | 14 | 17 | 28 |
CFR case fatality rate, ICU intensive care unit, NIPPV non-invasive positive pressure ventilation
Fig. 2Summary of recommendations on the initial management of hypoxic COVID-19 patients
Fig. 3Summary of recommendations on the management of patients with COVID-19 and ARDS
1. For healthcare workers performing |
*Aerosol-generating procedures in the ICU include: endotracheal intubation, bronchoscopy, open suctioning, administration of nebulized treatment, manual ventilation before intubation, physical proning of the patient, disconnecting the patient from the ventilator, non-invasive positive pressure ventilation, tracheostomy, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation
2. We |
3. For healthcare workers providing usual care for non-ventilated COVID-19 patients, we |
4. For healthcare workers who are performing |
5. For healthcare workers performing |
6. For COVID-19 patients requiring |
| 7. For intubated and mechanically ventilated adults with suspicion of COVID-19: |
7.1 For diagnostic testing, we |
7.2 With regard to lower respiratory samples, we |
8. In adults with |
9. For the |
10. For the |
11. For the |
12. For the |
13. For the |
14. For the |
15. For the |
16. For adults with |
17. If norepinephrine is not available, we |
18. For adults with |
19. For adults with |
20. For adults with |
21. For adults with |
22. For adults with |
23. In adults with COVID-19, we |
24. In adults with COVID-19 and |
25. For adults with COVID-19 and |
26. In adults with COVID-19 and |
27. In adults with COVID-19 and |
| 28. |
29. In adults with COVID-19 receiving NIPPV or HFNC, we |
30. In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and ARDS, we |
31. For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and |
32. For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and moderate to severe ARDS, we |
33. For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and ARDS, we |
34. For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and |
| 35. For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and |
35.1. (NMBA), over continuous NMBA infusion, to facilitate protective lung ventilation. |
35.2. In the event of persistent ventilator dyssynchrony, the need for ongoing deep sedation, prone ventilation, or persistently high plateau pressures, we |
36. In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 ARDS, we |
37. In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19, severe ARDS and hypoxemia despite optimizing ventilation and other rescue strategies, we |
38. For mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and hypoxemia despite optimizing ventilation, we |
39. If recruitment maneuvers are used, we |
40. In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and refractory hypoxemia despite optimizing ventilation, use of rescue therapies, and proning, we |
41. In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 and respiratory failure ( |
42. In mechanically ventilated adults with COVID-19 |
43. In mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19 and respiratory failure, we |
44. For critically ill adults with COVID-19 who develop fever, we |
45. In critically ill adults with COVID-19, we |
46. In critically ill adults with COVID-19, we |
| 47. In critically ill adults with COVID-19: |
| 47.1. We |
| 47.2. |
| 48. |
| 49. |
| 50. |