High flow nasal oxygen versus conventional oxygen therapy in patients with COVID-19 pneumonia and mild hypoxemia: a randomized controlled trial.
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Citazione:
High flow nasal oxygen versus conventional oxygen therapy in patients with COVID-19 pneumonia and mild hypoxemia: a randomized controlled trial / Crimi, Claudia; Noto, Alberto; Madotto, Fabiana; Ippolito, Mariachiara; Nolasco, Santi; Campisi, Raffaele; De Vuono, Stefano; Fiorentino, Giuseppe; Pantazopoulos, Ioannis; Chalkias, Athanasios; Libra, Alessandro; Mattei, Alessio; Scala, Raffaele; Clini, Enrico; Ergan, Begum; Lujan, Manel; Carlos Winck, João; Giarratano, Antonino; Carlucci, Annalisa; Gregoretti, Cesare; Groff, Paolo; Cortegiani., Andrea. - In: THORAX. - ISSN 0040-6376. - 78:(2022), pp. 354-361. [10.1136/thoraxjnl-2022-218806]
Abstract:
Rationale- In COVID-19 patients with mild hypoxemia, the clinical benefit of high flow nasal
oxygen (HFNO) remains unclear. We aimed to examine whether HFNO compared with
conventional oxygen therapy (COT) could prevent escalation of respiratory support in this
patient population.
Methods- In this multicentre, randomised, parallel-group, open-label trial, COVID-19
patients with peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) ≤92% who required oxygen therapy were
randomised to HFNO or COT. The primary outcome was the rate of escalation of respiratory
support (i.e., continuous positive airway pressure, noninvasive ventilation or invasive
mechanical ventilation) within 28 days. Among secondary outcomes, clinical recovery was
defined as the improvement in oxygenation (SpO2 ≥96% with FiO2 ≤30% or PaO2/FiO2 ratio
>300 mmHg).
Results- Among 364 randomised patients, 55 (30.3%) of 181 patients assigned to HFNO
and 70 (38.6%) of 181 patients assigned to COT underwent escalation of respiratory
support, with no significant difference between groups (absolute risk difference -8.2%
[95%CI -18 +1.4]; RR 0.79 [95%CI, 0.59-1.05]; p= 0.09). There was no significant difference
in clinical recovery (69.1% vs 60.8%; absolute risk difference 8.2 [95%CI -1.5% to +18.0%],
RR 1.14 [95%CI 0.98 to 1.32]), ICU admission (7.7% vs 11.0%, mean difference -0.2 days
[95%CI -1.2 to +0.7], absolute risk difference -3.3% [95%CI -9.3% to +2.6]), in hospital
length of stay (11 [IQR 8-17] vs 11 [IQR 7-20] days, absolute risk difference -1.0% [95%CI
-3.0% to +1.0]).
Conclusions- Among patients with COVID-19 pneumonia and mild hypoxemia, the use of
HFNO did not significantly reduce the likelihood of escalation of respiratory support.
Tipologia CRIS:
Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
COVID-19, Critical Care, Pneumonia
Elenco autori:
Crimi, Claudia; Noto, Alberto; Madotto, Fabiana; Ippolito, Mariachiara; Nolasco, Santi; Campisi, Raffaele; De Vuono, Stefano; Fiorentino, Giuseppe; Pantazopoulos, Ioannis; Chalkias, Athanasios; Libra, Alessandro; Mattei, Alessio; Scala, Raffaele; Clini, Enrico; Ergan, Begum; Lujan, Manel; Carlos Winck, João; Giarratano, Antonino; Carlucci, Annalisa; Gregoretti, Cesare; Groff, Paolo; Cortegiani., Andrea
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: