| Literature DB >> 35112304 |
Sylvain Boet1,2,3,4,5,6, Daniel I McIsaac1,7,8, Manoj M Lalu9,10,11, Alexa Lynn Grudzinski1, Billy Sun1, MengQi Zhang12,13, Agnes Crnic1, Abdul H Djokhdem12, Mary Hanna1, Joshua Montroy13, Laura V Duggan1, Gavin M Hamilton1, Dean A Fergusson13,7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Numerous guideline recommendations for airway and perioperative management during the COVID-19 pandemic have been published. We identified, synthesized, and compared guidelines intended for anesthesiologists. SOURCE: Member society websites of the World Federation of Societies of Anesthesiologists and the European Society of Anesthesiologists were searched. Recommendations that focused on perioperative airway management of patients with proven or potential COVID-19 were included. Accelerated screening was used; data were extracted by one reviewer and verified by a second. Data were organized into themes based on perioperative phase of care. PRINCIPALEntities:
Keywords: COVID-19; airway management; guidelines; perioperative; recommendations
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35112304 PMCID: PMC8809630 DOI: 10.1007/s12630-022-02199-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Anaesth ISSN: 0832-610X Impact factor: 6.713
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of recommendation selection.
Fig. 2Summary of preoperative assessment recommendations from the included publications (n = 30).
Fig. 3Summary of induction and airway instrumentation recommendations from the included publications (n = 30).
Fig. 4Summary of intraoperative management recommendations from the included publications (n = 30).
Fig. 5Summary of postoperative management recommendations from the included publications (n = 30).
Key issues and knowledge gaps to be addressed in perioperative airways guideline development
| Key considerations and questions | Suggestions |
|---|---|
| Provide structure to improve reproducibility of recommendations* | Systematic and transparent methods for development of guidelines should be followed (e.g., as per AGREE II9). Even if evidence is limited or absent, implement and report standardized grading of evidence.* |
| Guideline amendments as evidence evolves* | Development of living documents to be reviewed and updated at predetermined intervals. Ensure outdated recommendations are removed from relevant platforms. Obtain support from anesthesia and airway societies worldwide (e.g., Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation, World Anesthesia Society, Difficult Airway Society) to develop this infrastructure and promote knowledge translation (e.g., implementation and deimplementation).* |
| Optimal intubation and extubation techniques to effectively reduce viral transmission remains unknown | Ongoing development and use of appropriate aerosol science techniques (e.g., development and use of methods to differentiate water-containing from non-water-containing aerosols). Compare the effectiveness of different intubation and extubation strategies in reducing aerosolization. Provide suggestions for alternative techniques for the anticipated difficult airway. Include risk assessments in high-risk exposure settings (e.g., awake intubation). |
| Assessment of the long-term impacts of increased perioperative precautions | Determine impact of deferring elective/semiurgent surgeries on patient outcomes and health systems. Determine time required for safe operating room ventilation exchange between operative cases. Determine the environmental impact of perioperative precautions (e.g., use of plastic coverings, disposable PPE) and mitigation strategies Assessment of the impact of such precautions on medical education opportunities and potential detrimental effects at both undergraduate and post-graduate levels. Create mitigating strategies for the assessed issues. |
| Improve implementation and knowledge translation of guidelines* | Generate strategies for formal communication of implementation and de-implementation strategies as evidence evolves and policies are updated.* |
| Improve our preparedness and response to future pandemics | Development of international, multicentre, perioperative initiatives and organizations to conduct rapid synthesis, evaluation, and communication of data, and establish up-to-date consensus guidelines. Increase perioperative representation at a governmental level to ensure perioperative issues are considered when pandemic responses are developed. |
*These suggestions are considered universal to development of all guidelines, regardless of topic.
Key items for future perioperative airway guidelines
| General | PPE donning and doffing processes Training including simulation Nontechnical considerations Psychological support for anesthesia providers Self-surveillance for signs and symptoms Disposal of medical waste |
| Preoperative | Standardized team member roles PPE Triage of cases Preoperative assessment Infectious disease testing PPE for patients (e.g., surgical mask) |
| Induction and airway management | Team member roles and who should be present PPE Who should manage the airway/perform tracheal intubation Filters on anesthesia machines Suction Intubation equipment Preoxygenation Induction medication/methods Difficult airway procedures |
| Intraoperative | Team member roles and who should be present PPE Type of anesthesia Dedicated operating room Specific signage Anesthesia machine cleaning Disinfection of operating rooms Optimal room air turnover time between operative cases |
| Postoperative | Team member roles and who should be present PPE for extubation PPE doffing processes Patient recovery (e.g., location, transport) PPE for recovery room |
PPE = personal protective equipment