Non‐theatre emergency airway management: a multicentre prospective observational study

Author:

Gibson J.1,Leckie T.22,Hayward J.2,Hodgson L.23,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust Redhill, Surrey UK

2. Department of Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust Worthing, Sussex UK

3. Brighton and Sussex Medical School Brighton UK

Abstract

SummaryEmergency airway management events are common, unpredictable and associated with high complication rates. This multicentre prospective observational study across eight acute NHS hospitals in southeast England reports the incidence and nature of non‐theatre emergency airway management events. Data were collected from non‐theatre emergency airway management, including adverse events, over a continuous 28‐day window, and recorded on an electronic case report form. Events were classified according to type (advanced airway; simple airway; and cardiac arrest). A total of 166 events were recorded, with 111 advanced airway events involving tracheal intubation or tracheostomy management. Senior personnel with three or more years of airway management experience were present for 105/111 (95%) advanced airway management episodes. There was a significant reduction in consultant or equivalent presence out‐of‐hours (21/64, 33%) vs. in‐hours (34/47, 72%) (p < 0.001). We found high utilisation of videolaryngoscopy (95/106, 90%) and universal use of capnography for all advanced airway management events. This was lower during cardiac arrest when videolaryngoscopy was used in 11/16 (69%) of tracheal intubations and capnography in 21/32 (66%) of all cardiac arrest episodes. Adverse outcomes during advanced airway management (excluding during cardiac arrest) occurred in 53/111 (48%) episodes, including hypoxia (desaturation to SpO2 < 80% in 14/111, 13%) and hypotension (systolic blood pressure < 80 mmHg in 27/111, 25%). Adverse outcomes were not associated with time of day or experience level of airway practitioners. We conclude that there is a disparity between consultant presence for advanced airway interventions in‐ and out‐of‐hours; high utilisation of videolaryngoscopy and capnography, especially for advanced airway interventions; and a high incidence of hypotension and hypoxaemia, including critical values, during non‐theatre airway management.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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