Spontaneous-Breathing Trials with Pressure-Support Ventilation or a T-Piece

Abstract Background Patients with acute respiratory failure caused by cardiogenic pulmonary edema (CPE) may require mechanical ventilation that can cause further lung damage. Our aim was to determine the impact of ventilatory settings on CPE mortality. Methods Patients from the LUNG SAFE cohort, a m...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 2022-11, Vol.387 (20), p.1843-1854
Hauptverfasser: Thille, Arnaud, Gacouin, Arnaud, Coudroy, Rémi, Ehrmann, Stephan, Quenot, Jean-Pierre, Nay, Mai-Anh, Guitton, Christophe, Contou, Damien, Labro, Guylaine, Reignier, Jean, Pradel, Gael, Beduneau, Gaëtan, Dangers, Laurence, Saccheri, Clement, Prat, Gwénaël, Lacave, Guillaume, Sedillot, Nicholas, Terzi, Nicolas, La Combe, Béatrice, Mira, Jean-Paul, Romen, Antoine, Azais, Marie-Ange, Rouzé, Anahita, Devaquet, Jérôme, Delbove, Agathe, Dres, Martin, Bourenne, Jeremy, Lautrette, Alexandre, de Keizer, Joe, Ragot, Stéphanie, Frat, Jean-Pierre
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background Patients with acute respiratory failure caused by cardiogenic pulmonary edema (CPE) may require mechanical ventilation that can cause further lung damage. Our aim was to determine the impact of ventilatory settings on CPE mortality. Methods Patients from the LUNG SAFE cohort, a multicenter prospective cohort study of patients undergoing mechanical ventilation, were studied. Relationships between ventilatory parameters and outcomes (ICU discharge/hospital mortality) were assessed using latent mixture analysis and a marginal structural model. Results From 4499 patients, 391 meeting CPE criteria (median age 70 [interquartile range 59–78], 40% female) were included. ICU and hospital mortality were 34% and 40%, respectively. ICU survivors were younger (67 [57–77] vs 74 [64–80] years, p
ISSN:0028-4793
1533-4406
DOI:10.1056/NEJMoa2209041