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Published in: Intensive Care Medicine 9/2015

01-09-2015 | Seven-Day Profile Publication

High-flow nasal cannula oxygen during endotracheal intubation in hypoxemic patients: a randomized controlled clinical trial

Authors: Mickaël Vourc’h, Pierre Asfar, Christelle Volteau, Konstantinos Bachoumas, Noëmie Clavieras, Pierre-Yves Egreteau, Karim Asehnoune, Alain Mercat, Jean Reignier, Samir Jaber, Gwenaël Prat, Antoine Roquilly, Noëlle Brule, Daniel Villers, Cédric Bretonniere, Christophe Guitton

Published in: Intensive Care Medicine | Issue 9/2015

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Abstract

Purpose

Intubation of hypoxemic patients is associated with life-threatening adverse events. High-flow therapy by nasal cannula (HFNC) for preoxygenation before intubation has never been assessed by randomized study. Our objective was to evaluate the efficiency of HFNC for preoxygenation, compared to high fraction-inspired oxygen facial mask (HFFM).

Methods

Multicenter, randomized, open-labelled, controlled PREOXYFLOW trial (NCT 01747109) in six French intensive care units. Acute hypoxemic adults requiring intubation were randomly allocated to HFNC or HFFM. Patients were eligible if PaO2/FiO2 ratio was below 300 mmHg, respiratory rate at least 30/min and if they required FiO2 50 % or more to obtain at least 90 % oxygen saturation. HFNC was maintained throughout the procedure, whereas HFFM was removed at the end of general anaesthesia induction. Primary outcome was the lowest saturation throughout intubation procedure. Secondary outcomes included adverse events related to intubation, duration of mechanical ventilation and death.

Results

A total of 124 patients were randomized. In the intent-to-treat analysis, including 119 patients (HFNC n = 62; HFFM n = 57), the median (interquartile range) lowest saturation was 91.5 % (80–96) for HFNC and 89.5 % (81–95) for the HFFM group (p = 0.44). There was no difference for difficult intubation (p = 0.18), intubation difficulty scale, ventilation-free days (p = 0.09), intubation-related adverse events including desaturation <80 % or mortality (p = 0.46).

Conclusions

Compared to HFFM, HFNC as a preoxygenation device did not reduce the lowest level of desaturation.
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Metadata
Title
High-flow nasal cannula oxygen during endotracheal intubation in hypoxemic patients: a randomized controlled clinical trial
Authors
Mickaël Vourc’h
Pierre Asfar
Christelle Volteau
Konstantinos Bachoumas
Noëmie Clavieras
Pierre-Yves Egreteau
Karim Asehnoune
Alain Mercat
Jean Reignier
Samir Jaber
Gwenaël Prat
Antoine Roquilly
Noëlle Brule
Daniel Villers
Cédric Bretonniere
Christophe Guitton
Publication date
01-09-2015
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Intensive Care Medicine / Issue 9/2015
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-015-3796-z

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