| Literature DB >> 32682771 |
Jennifer N Ervin1, Victor C Rentes2, Emily R Dibble3, Michael W Sjoding4, Theodore J Iwashyna5, Catherine L Hough6, Michelle Ng Gong7, Anne E Sales8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The recent pandemic highlights the essential nature of optimizing the use of invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) in complex critical care settings. This review of reviews maps evidence-based practices (EBPs) that are associated with better outcomes among adult patients with acute respiratory failure or ARDS on the continuum of care, from intubation to liberation. RESEARCH QUESTION: What EPBs are recommended to reduce the duration of IMV and mortality rate among patients with acute respiratory failure/ARDS? STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: We identified an initial set of reports that links EBPs to mortality rates and/or duration of IMV. We conducted a review of reviews, focusing on preappraised guidelines, meta-analyses, and systematic reviews. We searched Scopus, CINAHL, and PubMed from January 2016 to January 2019 for additional evidence that has not yet been incorporated into current guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: ARDS; acute respiratory failure; evidence-based practice; invasive mechanical ventilation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32682771 PMCID: PMC7768938 DOI: 10.1016/j.chest.2020.06.080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chest ISSN: 0012-3692 Impact factor: 9.410
Figure 1Evidence-based practices in the provision of invasive mechanical ventilation for acute respiratory failure/ARDS across the care continuum. HFNC = high-flow nasal cannula; IMV = mechanical ventilation; NIV = noninvasive mechanical ventilation; PEEP = positive-end expiratory pressure.
Figure 2Flow diagram of literature search results. EBP = evidence-based practice.
Summary of the Systematic Reviews, Meta-Analyses, and Guidelines That Were Included
| Review | Type of Study | Aim | Patient Population | Studies Included, No. | Participants, No. | Assessed Publication Bias | Assessed Heterogeneity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aggarwal et al | Reanalysis of randomized controlled trial data | Evaluate oxygen exposure and Pa | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 10 | 4,361 | No | No |
| Aoyama et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links higher vs lower driving pressure and patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 7 | 6,062 | Yes | Yes |
| Devlin et al | Systematic review and guidelines | Evaluate evidence and update and expand the 2013 clinical guidelines for pain prevention and management, delirium, mobility, and sleep | Critically ill patients | Varied across topic | Varied across topic | Yes | Yes |
| Fan et al | Systematic review and guidelines | To provide clinical practice guidelines and review supportive evidence | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | Varied across evidence-based practices | Varied across evidence-based practices | Yes | Yes |
| Girard et al | Systematic review and guidelines | Evaluate evidence that links rehabilitation protocols, ventilator liberation protocols, and cuff leak tests to patient outcomes | Critically ill patients | Varied across topic | Varied across topic | Yes | Yes |
| Goligher et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links lung recruitment maneuvers to patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 6 | 1,423 | Yes | Yes |
| Guo et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links positive-end expiratory pressure to patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 9 | 3,612 | Yes | Yes |
| Huang et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links noninvasive ventilation on patient outcomes | Critically ill patients | 7 | 2,781 | Yes | Yes |
| Maitra et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links noninvasive ventilation on patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with acute hypoxic respiratory failure | 7 | Varied across analyses | Yes | Yes |
| Meduri et al | Meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links glucocorticoid treatment to patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 4 | 322 | Yes | Yes |
| Meduri et al | Meta-analysis | Updated evaluation of evidence that links glucocorticoid treatment to patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 9 | 816 | Yes | Yes |
| Munshi et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links prone position to patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 8 | 2,129 | Yes | Yes |
| Murray et al | Systematic review and guidelines | Update 2002 clinical practice guidelines for sustained neuromuscular blockade | Critically ill patients | Varied across topic | Varied across topic | Yes | Yes |
| Ni et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links conventional oxygen therapy to non-invasive ventilation to patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with acute respiratory failure | 18 | 3,881 | Yes | Yes |
| Ouellette et al | Systematic review and guidelines | Evaluate evidence that supports liberation from mechanical ventilation | Critically ill patients | Varied across topic | Varied across topics | Yes | Yes |
| Schmidt et al | Systematic review and guidelines | Evaluate evidence that links rehabilitation protocols, ventilator liberation protocols, and cuff leak tests to patient outcomes | Critically ill patients | Varied across topic | Varied across topic | Yes | Yes |
| Silversides et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Evaluate the evidence that links fluid management to patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS or sepsis | 11 | 2,051 | Yes | Yes |
| Walkey et al | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Review evidence that links low tidal volumes and inspiratory pressure with clinical outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 7 Randomized controlled trials | 1,481 | Yes | Yes |
| Yang et al | Meta-analysis | Evaluate evidence that links glucocorticoid treatment to patient outcomes | Patients diagnosed with ARDS | 14 | 1,441 | Yes | Yes |
Summary of Recommendations and Results
| Review | Care Continuum Phase | Evidence-Based Practice | Evidence-Based Practice Description | Impact on Outcome | Recommended for Use | Level of Evidence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanical Duration | Death | ||||||
| Aggarwal et al | 1 | Conservative oxygen therapy | The goal of P | Yes | Yes | Yes | Moderate |
| Aoyama et al | 1 | Driving pressure | Higher driving pressure is associated with death. | … | Yes | No | Moderate |
| Fan et al | 1 | Lung protective ventilation | Invasive mechanical ventilation with the use of lower tidal volumes (4-8 mL/kg predicted body weight). | … | Yes | Yes | Moderate |
| Walkey et al | 1 | Lung protective ventilation | Invasive mechanical ventilation with the use of lower tidal volumes (4-8 mL/kg predicted body weight). | … | Yes | Yes, conditional on higher positive-end expiratory pressure among patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS | Moderate |
| Murray et al | 1 | Neuromuscular blocking agent | Conditional recommendation to administer a neuromuscular blocking agent by continuous IV infusion early in the course of ARDS. | Yes | Yes | Yes, conditional, for patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS | Moderate |
| Fan et al | 1 | Positive-end expiratory pressure | Conditional recommendation for higher positive-end expiratory pressure, of approximately 15 cm water. | … | Yes | Yes, conditional, for patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS | Moderate |
| Goligher et al | 1 | Positive-end expiratory pressure | Conditional recommendation for higher positive-end expiratory pressure, of approximately 15 cm water. | … | Yes | Yes, conditional, in combination with lung recruitment maneuvers for patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS | Low |
| Guo et al | 1 | Positive-end expiratory pressure | Conditional recommendation for higher positive-end expiratory pressure, of approximately 15 cm water. | … | Yes | Yes, conditional on patients who have better oxygenation in response to positive-end expiratory pressure | Low |
| Walkey et al | 1 | Positive-end expiratory pressure | Conditional recommendation for higher positive-end expiratory pressure, of approximately 15 cm water. | … | Yes | Yes, conditional when used in combination with lung protective ventilation when compared to high tidal volumes low positive-end expiratory pressure | Low |
| Fan et al | 1 | Prone position | Conditional recommendation for prone positioning | … | Yes | Yes, conditional, when used for >12 h/d for patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS | Moderate |
| Munshi et al | 1 | Prone position | Conditional recommendation for prone positioning | … | Yes | Yes, conditional, when used for >12 h/d for patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS | Moderate |
| Devlin et al | 2 | Analgesia-first approach to sedation and pain management | Minimize the use of opioids and sedatives; administer pharmacologic adjuvants to opioid therapy or nonpharmacologic interventions to reduce pain. | Yes | … | Yes | Moderate |
| Silversides et al | 2 | Conservative fluid management | Use protocols for patients who are diuresing, and/or monitor extravascular lung water, pulse pressure variation, or intrathoracic blood volume index, while restricting or minimizing fluid. | Yes | … | Yes | Moderate |
| Devlin et al | 2 | Delirium assessment, prevention, and management | Use screening tools to regularly assess delirium; avoid benzodiazepine; only short-term use of antipsychotic agents should be used while patients are in distress; consider multicomponent, nonpharmacologic interventions that reduce modifiable risk factors. | … | Yes | Yes | Low |
| Devlin et al | 2 | Early mobility protocols | Protocolized rehabilitation directed toward early mobilization for patients receiving invasive mechanical ventilation for >24 h. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Girard et al | 2 | Early mobility protocols | Protocolized rehabilitation directed toward early mobilization for patients receiving invasive mechanical ventilation for >24 h. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Schmidt et al | 2 | Early mobility protocols | Protocolized rehabilitation directed toward early mobilization for patients receiving invasive mechanical ventilation for >24 h. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Meduri et al | 2 | Glucocorticoid treatment | Early- and low-dose methylprednisolone treatment helps resolve ARDS symptoms. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Moderate |
| Meduri et al | 2 | Glucocorticoid treatment | Conditional recommendation to provide methylprednisolone. | Yes | Yes | Yes, conditional on early moderate-to-severe and late persistent ARDS | Moderate |
| Yang et al | 2 | Glucocorticoid treatment | Early- and low-dose methylprednisolone treatment helps resolve ARDS symptoms. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Low |
| Fan et al | 2 | High-frequency oscillatory ventilation | Conditional recommendation regarding routine use high-frequency oscillatory ventilation. | Yes | Yes | No, conditional, not to be used for patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS | Strong |
| Devlin et al | 2 | Sedation protocols | Monitor sedation; use protocols that attempt to minimize sedation in patients who are not receiving neuromuscular blockades by interrupting sedation daily or continuously titrating sedatives to maintain a light level of sedation (ie, use a targeted sedation strategy). | Yes | Yes | Yes | Low |
| Ouellette et al | 2 | Sedation protocols | Monitor sedation; use protocols that attempt to minimize sedation. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Schmidt et al | 2 | Sedation protocols | Monitor sedation; use protocols that attempt to minimize sedation. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Devlin et al | 2 | Sleep management | Do not administer propofol to assist in sleep. | Yes | … | No | Low |
| Schmidt et al | 2 | Spontaneous awakening trial | Lighten or discontinue sedation for a period of time each day to wake the patient up and evaluate alertness. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Schmidt et al | 2 | Spontaneous breathing trial | Turn ventilator support down or off with pressure augmentation to exercise the lungs and assess readiness for extubation. | Yes | … | Yes | Moderate |
| Girard et al | 3 | Cuff leak test | Perform cuff leak test for patients who meet extubation criteria and are deemed high risk for postextubation stridor; if failed but are ready for extubation, administer systemic steroids at least 4 hours before extubation; repeat cuff test not required. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Schmidt et al | 3 | Cuff leak test | Perform cuff leak test for patients who meet extubation criteria and are deemed high risk for postextubation stridor; if failed but are ready for extubation, administer systemic steroids at least 4 hours before extubation; repeat cuff test not required. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Huang et al | 3 | Extubation to high-flow nasal cannula | Extubate to high-flow nasal cannula is an effective alternative to patients who cannot tolerate noninvasive mechanical ventilation. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Low |
| Maitra et al | 3 | Extubation to high-flow nasal cannula | Extubate to high-flow nasal cannula is an effective alternative to patients who cannot tolerate noninvasive mechanical ventilation. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Low |
| Ni et al | 3 | Extubation to high-flow nasal cannula | Extubate to high-flow nasal cannula is an effective alternative to patients who cannot tolerate noninvasive mechanical ventilation. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Moderate |
| Huang et al | 3 | Extubation to noninvasive mechanical ventilation | Noninvasive mechanical ventilation appears to be comparable with high-flow nasal oxygen. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Low |
| Maitra et al | 3 | Extubation to noninvasive mechanical ventilation | Noninvasive mechanical ventilation appears to be comparable with high-flow nasal oxygen. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Low |
| Ni et al | 3 | Extubation to noninvasive mechanical ventilation | Noninvasive mechanical ventilation appears to be comparable with high-flow nasal oxygen. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Moderate |
| Ouellette et al | 3 | Extubation to noninvasive mechanical ventilation | For patients at risk for extubation failure who have received invasive mechanical ventilation >24 h and who have passed a spontaneous breathing trial, extubate to preventive noninvasive mechanical ventilation. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Moderate |
| Schmidt et al | 3 | Extubation to noninvasive mechanical ventilation | For patients at risk for extubation failure who have received invasive mechanical ventilation >24 h and who have passed a spontaneous breathing trial, extubate to preventive noninvasive mechanical ventilation. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Moderate |
| Girard et al | 3 | Ventilator liberation protocol | Treat patients who have received invasive mechanical ventilation for >24 h with a ventilator liberation protocol; however, insufficient evidence to recommend any single protocol over another. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |
| Schmidt et al | 3 | Ventilator liberation protocol | Treat patients who have received invasive mechanical ventilation for >24 h with a ventilator liberation protocol; however, insufficient evidence to recommend any single protocol over another. | Yes | … | Yes | Low |