| Literature DB >> 32548084 |
Yuan Shi1, Hemananda Muniraman2, Manoj Biniwale3, Rangasamy Ramanathan4.
Abstract
Majority of extremely preterm infants require positive pressure ventilatory support at the time of delivery or during the transitional period. Most of these infants present with respiratory distress (RD) and continue to require significant respiratory support in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) remains as one of the major morbidities among survivors of the extremely preterm infants. BPD is associated with long-term adverse pulmonary and neurological outcomes. Invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) and supplemental oxygen are two major risk factors for the development of BPD. Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) has been shown to decrease the need for IMV and reduce the risk of BPD when compared to IMV. This article reviews respiratory management with current NIV support strategies in extremely preterm infants both in delivery room as well as in the NICU and discusses the evidence to support commonly used NIV modes including nasal continuous positive airway pressure (NCPAP), nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV), bi-level positive pressure (BI-PAP), high flow nasal cannula (HFNC), and newer NIV strategies currently being studied including, nasal high frequency ventilation (NHFV) and non-invasive neutrally adjusted ventilatory assist (NIV-NAVA). Randomized, clinical trials have shown that early NIPPV is superior to NCPAP to decrease the need for intubation and IMV in preterm infants with RD. It is also important to understand that selection of the device used to deliver NIPPV has a significant impact on its success. Ventilator generated NIPPV results in significantly lower rates of extubation failures when compared to Bi-PAP. Future studies should address synchronized NIPPV including NIV-NAVA and early rescue use of NHFV in the respiratory management of extremely preterm infants.Entities:
Keywords: bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD); high flow nasal cannula (HFNC); nasal continuous positive airway pressure (NCPAP); nasal high frequency ventilation (NHFV); nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV); noninvasive ventilation (NIV); noninvasive ventilation-neurally adjusted ventilatory assist (NIVNAVA)
Year: 2020 PMID: 32548084 PMCID: PMC7270199 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2020.00270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Common modes of noninvasive ventilation.
Figure 2Newer modes of NIV.
Figure 3Nasal interfaces to provide NIV.
Figure 4Application of RAM NC in the NICU.
Figure 5NCPAP in delivery room and early failures.
Figure 6Advantages of RAM NC over Bag & Mask in the delivery room.
Studies comparing NCPAP and intubation with IMV.
| Morley et al. ( | NCPAP (307) vs. IMV (303) | 25–28 | 29 vs. 35 | 6.5 vs. 5.9 | 34 vs. 39 | 59 |
| SUPPORT et al. ( | NCPAP (663) vs. IMV (653) | 24–28 | 40 vs. 44 | 14 vs. 17 | 49 vs. 54 | 83 |
| Dunn et al. ( | NCPAP (223) vs. INSURE (216) vs. IMV (209) | 26–29 | n/a | 4 vs. 7 vs 7 | 30 vs. 28 vs. 36 | 52 |
| Rojas et al. ( | NCPAP (137) vs. INSURE (141) | 27–30 | 59 vs. 49 | 9 vs. 9 | 62 vs. 54 | 53 |
| Sandri et al. ( | NCPAP (105) vs. INSURE (103) | 25–29 | n/a | n/a | 21 vs. 22 | 31 |
| Göpel et al. ( | NCPAP ± LISA (108) vs. nCPAP ± INSURE (112) | 26–28 | 8 vs. 13 | n/a | 14 vs. 15 | 46 |
| Kanmaz et al. ( | NCPAP + LISA (100) vs. nCPAP INSURE (100) | <30 | 10 vs. 20* | 16 vs. 13 | 34 vs. 45 | 40 |
| Tapia et al. ( | NCPAP + INSURE (131) vs. MV (125) | 800–1,500 g | 7 vs. 10 | 8 vs. 9 | 14 vs. 19 | 30 |
NCPAP, Nasal continuous positive pressure ventilation; IMV, Invasive mechanical ventilation; INSURE, INtubation, SURfactant and Extubation; LISA, Less invasive surfactant administration; GA, Gestational age (weeks) *P < 0.05.
Studies comparing NIPPV and NCPAP.
| Armanian et al. ( | 98 | No | No | <35 | 4 vs. 2 | 4 vs. 2 | n/a |
| Bisceglia et al. ( | 88 | No | No | 28–34 | 2 vs. 2 | 0 vs. 0 | 4 vs. 8 |
| Kirplani et al. ( | 185 | Some | No | <30 | 21 vs. 29 | 3 vs. 4 | 19 vs. 14 |
| Meneses et al. ( | 200 | No | No | 26–33 | 58 vs. 64 | 22 vs. 26 | 26 vs. 25 |
| Kugelman et al. ( | 84 | Yes | No | 24–34 | 25 vs. 46 | 0 vs. 0 | 2 vs. 17 |
| Sai Sunil Kishore et al. ( | 76 | No | Some | 28–34 | 19 vs. 41 | 13 vs. 23 | 3 vs. 10 |
| Salama et al. ( | 60 | Yes | Some | 28–34 | 10 vs. 20 | 0 vs. 3 | 3 vs. 6 |
| Lista et al. ( | 40 | Yes | Yes | 28–34 | 10 vs. 15 | 0 vs. 0 | 0 vs. 0 |
| Ramanathan et al. ( | 110 | No | Yes | 26–29 | 17 vs. 42 | 2 vs. 2 | 22 vs. 39 |
| Oncel et al. ( | 200 | No | No | 26–32 | 13 vs. 29 | 4 vs. 6 | 7 vs. 16 |
NIPPV, Nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation; NCPAP, Nasal continuous positive pressure ventilation.
p < 0.05.
Suggested settings for CPAP, Bi-PAP, NIPPV, and HFNC.
| NCPAP | 5–6 cmH2O | 8–10 cmH2O | 1 cmH2O | 4 cmH2O |
| Bi-PAP | High Pressure 10 cmH2O | High Pressure 15 cmH2O | 1 cmH2O | High/Low Pressure 8/5 cm H2O |
| NIPPV | PIP 20 cmH2O | PIP 35-38 cmH2O | wean PIP first by 1–2 until lowest possible PIP | PIP 12 or 15 cmH2O |
| HFNC gas flow | 4–6 L/min | 8 L/min. | 0.5–1.0 L/min | 1–4 L/min |
NIV, non-invasive ventilation; NCPAP, nasal continuous positive airway pressure; NIPPV, nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation; HFNC, high flow nasal cannula; PIP, peak inspiratory pressure; PEEP, positive end expiratory pressure.
Interventions to improve rates of successful extubation in preterm infants.
| NCPAP vs. Head-Box | 0.59 [0.48–0.72] | 6 [3–9] |
| NCPAP vs. nHF | 1.11 [0.84–1.47] | – |
| Methylxanthines | 0.48 [0.32–0.71] | 4 [2–7] |
| DOXAPRAM | 0.80 [0.22–2.97] | – |
| NIPPV vs. NCPAP | 0.70 [0.60–0.81] | 8 [5–13] |
| NS-NIPPV or Bi-PAP vs. NCPAP | 064 [0.44–0.95] | 8 [4–50] |
| SNIPPV vs. NCPAP | 0.25 [0.15–041] | 4 [2–5] |
| NS-NIPPV or sNIPPV vs. NCPAP | 0.28 [0.18–043] | 4 [2–5] |
NS-NIPPV, non-synchronized NIPPV; sNIPPV, synchronized NIPPV; nHF, High flow nasal cannula. Ferguson et al. (.
NIV NAVA suggested settings.
| NAVA level | 2 cm H2O/μV | 4 cm H2O/μV | 0.2 to 0.5 cmH2O/μV | 0.5 cmH2O/μV |
| PEEP | 6 cmH2O | 8-10 cmH2O | 1 cmH2O | 5 cmH2O |
| Edi Trigger | 0.5 μV | 2 μV | Adjust as needed | |
| Backup Pressure Control above PEEP | 15 cmH2O | 30–35 cmH2O | 1–2 cmH2O | Per NIPPV |
| Rate | 40 /min | Per NIPPV | Per NIPPV | Per NIPPV |
| Inspiratory time | 0.5 s | – | – | – |
| Trigger sensitivity | 1 to 2 | – | – | – |
Edi, electrical activity of diaphragm; PEEP, positive end expiratory pressure; NIPPV, nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation.
Studies comparing Noninvasive neutrally adjusted ventilator assist (NIV NAVA) to other forms of non-invasive ventilation.
| Lee et al. ( | Retrospective | NCPAP | <30 (30) | NS | – | – | NS | NS | |
| Kallio et al. ( | Prospective | NCPAP | 28–36 (40) | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Yonehara et al. ( | Retrospective | NIPPV | <30 | NS | – | – | NS | – | – |
| Lee et al. ( | Observational crossover | NIV-PS | <32 | – | – | – | – | – | |
| Gibu et al. ( | Observational crossover | NIMV | <37 (11) | – | NS | – | |||
| Yagui et al. ( | Randomized controlled | NCPAP | Preterm <1,500 g | NS | – | – | NS | NS | |
| Yagui et al. ( | Retrospective | NCPAP | ELBW | – | – | NS | NS |
NIPPV, Nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation; NCPAP, Nasal continuous positive pressure ventilation; NIV-PS, Non-invasive ventilation-Pressure support; GA, Gestational age.
IMV: invasive mechanical ventilation; Syn-synchronization.
Suggested settings for Nasal High Frequency Ventilation.
| Frequency, Hz | Start at 6–8 Hz; May decrease to 4 Hz in patients with hypercapnia; If using HFJV, start at 300 bpm (5 Hz) and may decrease to 240 bpm (4 Hz) |
| Amplitude, cmH2O | MAPx2; Start at 20–30 cmH2O; May increase to as high 70 cmH2O. If using during weaning, set Amplitude equaling PIP prior to extubation |
| I: E ratio | Start at 1:1; May change to 1:2 in cases of gas trapping; If using HFJV, jet valve on time: 20 ms and may increase to 30–34 ms to improve oxygenation and increase tidal volume delivery |
| Mean Airway Pressure (MAP), cmH2O | MAP: Start with the same MAP as on SIMV or 2–3 cmH2O higher than CPAP; Start at 8–10 cmH2O; May increase as needed based on FiO2 and or lung expansion |
| NIPPV Back up rate | If available, use rates between 30 and 40 bpm; If using HFJV, keep the NIPPV settings same as before adding NHFJV |
I:E ratio, Inspiration: Expiration ratio; HFJV, high frequency jet ventilator; NIPPV, nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation; MAP, Mean Airway Pressure; SIMV, Synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation.