Noninvasive respiratory support outside the intensive care unit for acute respiratory failure related to coronavirus-19 disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Published:2021-07-30
Issue:1
Volume:25
Page:
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ISSN:1364-8535
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Container-title:Critical Care
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Crit Care
Author:
Cammarota GianmariaORCID, Esposito Teresa, Azzolina Danila, Cosentini Roberto, Menzella Francesco, Aliberti Stefano, Coppadoro Andrea, Bellani Giacomo, Foti Giuseppe, Grasselli Giacomo, Cecconi Maurizio, Pesenti Antonio, Vitacca Michele, Lawton Tom, Ranieri V. Marco, Di Domenico Sandro Luigi, Resta Onofrio, Gidaro Antonio, Potalivo Antonella, Nardi Giuseppe, Brusasco Claudia, Tesoro Simonetta, Navalesi Paolo, Vaschetto Rosanna, De Robertis Edoardo
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Noninvasive respiratory support (NIRS) has been diffusely employed outside the intensive care unit (ICU) to face the high request of ventilatory support due to the massive influx of patients with acute respiratory failure (ARF) caused by coronavirus-19 disease (COVID-19). We sought to summarize the evidence on clinically relevant outcomes in COVID-19 patients supported by NIV outside the ICU.
Methods
We searched PUBMED®, EMBASE®, and the Cochrane Controlled Clinical trials register, along with medRxiv and bioRxiv repositories for pre-prints, for observational studies and randomized controlled trials, from inception to the end of February 2021. Two authors independently selected the investigations according to the following criteria: (1) observational study or randomized clinical trials enrolling ≥ 50 hospitalized patients undergoing NIRS outside the ICU, (2) laboratory-confirmed COVID-19, and (3) at least the intra-hospital mortality reported. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-analysis guidelines were followed. Data extraction was independently performed by two authors to assess: investigation features, demographics and clinical characteristics, treatments employed, NIRS regulations, and clinical outcomes. Methodological index for nonrandomized studies tool was applied to determine the quality of the enrolled studies. The primary outcome was to assess the overall intra-hospital mortality of patients under NIRS outside the ICU. The secondary outcomes included the proportions intra-hospital mortalities of patients who underwent invasive mechanical ventilation following NIRS failure and of those with ‘do-not-intubate’ (DNI) orders.
Results
Seventeen investigations (14 peer-reviewed and 3 pre-prints) were included with a low risk of bias and a high heterogeneity, for a total of 3377 patients. The overall intra-hospital mortality of patients receiving NIRS outside the ICU was 36% [30–41%]. 26% [21–30%] of the patients failed NIRS and required intubation, with an intra-hospital mortality rising to 45% [36–54%]. 23% [15–32%] of the patients received DNI orders with an intra-hospital mortality of 72% [65–78%]. Oxygenation on admission was the main source of between-study heterogeneity.
Conclusions
During COVID-19 outbreak, delivering NIRS outside the ICU revealed as a feasible strategy to cope with the massive demand of ventilatory assistance.
Registration
PROSPERO, https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/, CRD42020224788, December 11, 2020.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine
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