拉丁美洲重症监护病房急性呼吸衰竭患者在转为自主通气过程中坚持使用低潮气量(SPIRAL):研究方案。

Critical care science Pub Date : 2024-08-12 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.62675/2965-2774.20240044-en
Fabia Diniz-Silva, Bruno Valle Pinheiro, Luis Felipe Reyes, Alexandre Biasi Cavalcanti, Belinda Figueredo, Fernando Rios, Flávia Ribeiro Machado, Gabriel Preda, Guillermo Bugedo, Israel Silva Maia, Leda Tomiko Yamada da Silveira, Luis Herrera, Manuel Jibaja, Miguel Ibarra-Estrada, Mino Cestari, Nicolás Nin, Rollin Roldan, Tiago Mendonça Dos Santos, Viviane Cordeiro Veiga, Alejandro Bruhn, Juliana Carvalho Ferreira
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:急性呼吸衰竭患者通常需要机械通气来减少呼吸功和改善气体交换,但这可能会加重肺损伤。保护性通气策略的特点是低潮气量(≤ 8 毫升/千克预测体重)和将高原压限制在 30cmH2O 以下,这些策略已显示可改善急性呼吸窘迫综合征患者的预后。然而,在向自主通气过渡的过程中,将潮气量维持在保护水平内可能具有挑战性,而且目前还不清楚自主通气期间的低潮气量是否会影响患者的预后。我们制定了一项研究方案,以估计低氧血症急性呼吸衰竭患者在自主通气的头 24 小时内低潮气量通气的发生率及其与无呼吸机天数和存活率的关系:我们设计了一项为期 28 天的多中心、跨国队列研究,研究对象包括拉丁美洲重症监护病房中转入自主通气的急性呼吸衰竭患者(定义为氧分压/吸入氧分压比值小于 300 mmHg):我们计划将十个国家的 422 名患者纳入研究范围。主要结果是自主通气最初 24 小时内低潮气量的发生率和第 28 天无呼吸机天数。次要结果是重症监护室和医院死亡率、异步发生率以及恢复控制通气和镇静:在这项研究中,我们将评估自主通气期间低潮气量的发生率及其与临床结果的关系,这将为临床实践和未来的临床试验提供参考。
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Adherence to low tidal volume in the transition to spontaneous ventilation in patients with acute respiratory failure in intensive care units in Latin America (SPIRAL): a study protocol.

Objective: Patients with acute respiratory failure often require mechanical ventilation to reduce the work of breathing and improve gas exchange; however, this may exacerbate lung injury. Protective ventilation strategies, characterized by low tidal volumes (≤ 8mL/kg of predicted body weight) and limited plateau pressure below 30cmH2O, have shown improved outcomes in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome. However, in the transition to spontaneous ventilation, it can be challenging to maintain tidal volume within protective levels, and it is unclear whether low tidal volumes during spontaneous ventilation impact patient outcomes. We developed a study protocol to estimate the prevalence of low tidal volume ventilation in the first 24 hours of spontaneous ventilation in patients with hypoxemic acute respiratory failure and its association with ventilator-free days and survival.

Methods: We designed a multicenter, multinational, cohort study with a 28-day follow-up that will include patients with acute respiratory failure, defined as a partial oxygen pressure/fraction of inspired oxygen ratio < 300mmHg, in transition to spontaneous ventilation in intensive care units in Latin America.

Results: We plan to include 422 patients in ten countries. The primary outcomes are the prevalence of low tidal volume in the first 24 hours of spontaneous ventilation and ventilator-free days on day 28. The secondary outcomes are intensive care unit and hospital mortality, incidence of asynchrony and return to controlled ventilation and sedation.

Conclusion: In this study, we will assess the prevalence of low tidal volume during spontaneous ventilation and its association with clinical outcomes, which can inform clinical practice and future clinical trials.

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