Research Papers:
Oxygenation/non-invasive ventilation strategy and risk for intubation in immunocompromised patients with hypoxemic acute respiratory failure
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Abstract
Guillaume Dumas1,2, Sylvie Chevret2, Virginie Lemiale1, Frédéric Pène3, Alexandre Demoule4, Julien Mayaux4, Achille Kouatchet5, Martine Nyunga6, Pierre Perez7, Laurent Argaud8, François Barbier9, François Vincent10, Fabrice Bruneel11, Kada Klouche12, Loay Kontar13, Anne-Sophie Moreau14, Jean Reignier15, Laurent Papazian16, Yves Cohen17, Djamel Mokart18 and Elie Azoulay1,2
1Medical Intensive Care Unit, Saint-Louis Teaching Hospital, Paris, France
2ECSTRA Team, Biostatistics and Clinical Epidemiology, UMR 1153 (Center of Epidemiology and Biostatistic Sorbonne Paris Cité, CRESS), INSERM, Paris Diderot University, Paris, France
3Medical Intensive Care Unit, Cochin Teaching Hospital, Paris, France
4Medical Intensive Care Unit, Pitié-Salpêtrière Teaching Hospital, Paris, France
5Medical Intensive Care Unit, Angers Teaching Hospital, Angers, France
6Medical Intensive Care Unit, Victor Provo Hospital, Roubaix, France
7Medical Intensive Care Unit, Brabois University Hospital, Nancy, France
8Medical Intensive Care Unitt, Edouard Herriot Teaching Hospital, Lyon, France
9Medical Intensive Care Unit, La Source Hospital-CHR Orleans, Orléans, France
10Intensive Care Unit, CHI Le Raincy-Montfermeil, Le Raincy-Montfermeil, France
11Intensive Care Unit, Hopital Andre Mignot-Le Chesnay, Paris, France
12Intensive Care Unit, Lapeyronie University Hospital, Montpellier, France
13Centre Hospitalier Universitaire-Amiens, Amiens, France
14Centre de Réanimation, CHRU Lille, Lille, France
15Réanimation Médicale, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire-Nantes, Nantes, France
16Réanimation DRIS, Hôpital Nord, Marseille, France
17Intensive Care Unit, Hôpital d'Avicenne, APHP, Bobigny, France
18Intensive Care Unit, IPC, Marseille, France
Correspondence to:
Guillaume Dumas, email: [email protected]
Elie Azoulay, email: [email protected]
Keywords: acute respiratory failure; immunocompromised; oxygenation; noninvasive ventilation; high flow nasal cannula
Received: June 09, 2018 Accepted: August 21, 2018 Published: September 14, 2018
ABSTRACT
We investigated how the initial ventilation/oxygenation management may influence the need for intubation on the coming day in a cohort of immunocompromised patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (ARF).
Data from 847 immunocompromised patients with ARF were used to estimate the probability of intubation at day+1 within the first 3 days of ICU admission, according to oxygenation management. First, noninvasive ventilation (NIV) was compared to oxygen therapy whatever the administration device; then standard oxygen was compared to High Flow Nasal Cannula therapy alone (HFNC), NIV alone or NIV+HFNC. To take into account the oxygenation regimens over time and to handle confounders, propensity score weighting models were used.
In the original sample, the probability of intubation at day+1 was higher in the NIV group vs oxygenation therapy (OR = 1.64, 95CI, 1.09–2.48) or vs the standard oxygen group (OR = 2.05, 95CI: 1.29–3.29); it was also increased in the HFNC group compared to standard oxygen (OR = 2.85, 95CI: 1.37–5.67). However, all these differences disappeared by handling confounding-by-indication in the weighted samples, as well as in the pooled model. Note that adjusted OR for day-28 mortality increased with the day of intubation.
In this large cohort of immunocompromised patients, ventilation/oxygenation management had no impact on the probability of intubation on the coming day.
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PII: 26069