Extubation Success Prediction in a Multicentric Cohort of Patients with Severe Brain Injury

Author:

Asehnoune Karim1,Seguin Philippe1,Lasocki Sigismond1,Roquilly Antoine1,Delater Adrien1,Gros Antoine1,Denou Florian1,Mahé Pierre-Joachim1,Nesseler Nicolas1,Demeure-dit-Latte Dominique1,Launey Yoann1,Lakhal Karim1,Rozec Bertrand1,Mallédant Yannick1,Sébille Véronique1,Jaber Samir1,Le Thuaut Aurélie1,Feuillet Fanny1,Cinotti Raphaël1,

Affiliation:

1. From the Intensive Care Unit, Anesthesia and Critical Care Department, Hôtel Dieu (K.A., A.R, A.D., P.-J.M., D.D.-d.-L., R.C.), Laboratoire UPRES EA 3826, Thérapeutiques Cliniques et Expérimentales des Infections (K.A., A.R.), Institut du Thorax, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale UMR1087 IRT (B.R.), EA 4275 SPHERE, Methods for Patients-centered Outcomes and Health Research

Abstract

Abstract Background Patients with brain injury are at high risk of extubation failure. Methods We conducted a prospective observational cohort study in four intensive care units of three university hospitals. The aim of the study was to create a score that could predict extubation success in patients with brain injury. Results A total of 437 consecutive patients with brain injury were included, and 338 patients (77.3%) displayed successful extubation. In the multivariate analysis, four features were associated with success the day of extubation: age less than 40 yr, visual pursuit, swallowing attempts, and a Glasgow coma score greater than 10. In the score, each item counted as one. A score of 3 or greater was associated with 90% extubation success. The area under the receiver–operator curve was 0.75 (95% CI, 0.69 to 0.81). After internal validation by bootstrap, the area under the receiver–operator curve was 0.73 (95% CI, 0.68 to 0.79). Extubation success was significantly associated with shorter duration of mechanical ventilation (11 [95% CI, 5 to 17 days] vs. 22 days [95% CI, 13 to 29 days]; P < 0.0001), shorter intensive care unit length of stay (15 [95% CI, 9 to 23 days] vs. 27 days [95% CI, 21 to 36 days]; P < 0.0001), and lower in-intensive care unit mortality (4 [1.2%] vs. 11 [11.1%]; P < 0.0001). Conclusions Our score exploring both airway functions and neurologic status may increase the probability of successful extubation in patients with severe brain injury.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference34 articles.

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