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Published in: Lung 2/2016

01-04-2016

Optimizing Prophylactic CPAP in Patients Without Obstructive Sleep Apnoea for High-Risk Abdominal Surgeries: A Meta-regression Analysis

Authors: Preet Mohinder Singh, Anuradha Borle, Dipal Shah, Ashish Sinha, Jeetinder Kaur Makkar, Anjan Trikha, Basavana Gouda Goudra

Published in: Lung | Issue 2/2016

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Abstract

Introduction

Prophylactic continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) can prevent pulmonary adverse events following upper abdominal surgeries. The present meta-regression evaluates and quantifies the effect of degree/duration of (CPAP) on the incidence of postoperative pulmonary events.

Methods

Medical databases were searched for randomized controlled trials involving adult patients, comparing the outcome in those receiving prophylactic postoperative CPAP versus no CPAP, undergoing high-risk abdominal surgeries. Our meta-analysis evaluated the relationship between the postoperative pulmonary complications and the use of CPAP. Furthermore, meta-regression was used to quantify the effect of cumulative duration and degree of CPAP on the measured outcomes.

Results

Seventy-three potentially relevant studies were identified, of which 11 had appropriate data, allowing us to compare a total of 362 and 363 patients in CPAP and control groups, respectively. Qualitatively, Odds ratio for CPAP showed protective effect for pneumonia [0.39 (0.19–0.78)], atelectasis [0.51 (0.32–0.80)] and pulmonary complications [0.37 (0.24–0.56)] with zero heterogeneity. For prevention of pulmonary complications, odds ratio was better for continuous than intermittent CPAP. Meta-regression demonstrated a positive correlation between the degree of CPAP and the incidence of pneumonia with a regression coefficient of +0.61 (95 % CI 0.02–1.21, P = 0.048, τ 2 = 0.078, r 2 = 7.87 %). Overall, adverse effects were similar with or without the use of CPAP.

Conclusions

Prophylactic postoperative use of continuous CPAP significantly reduces the incidence of postoperative pneumonia, atelectasis and pulmonary complications in patients undergoing high-risk abdominal surgeries. Quantitatively, increasing the CPAP levels does not necessarily enhance the protective effect against pneumonia. Instead, protective effect diminishes with increasing degree of CPAP.
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Metadata
Title
Optimizing Prophylactic CPAP in Patients Without Obstructive Sleep Apnoea for High-Risk Abdominal Surgeries: A Meta-regression Analysis
Authors
Preet Mohinder Singh
Anuradha Borle
Dipal Shah
Ashish Sinha
Jeetinder Kaur Makkar
Anjan Trikha
Basavana Gouda Goudra
Publication date
01-04-2016
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Lung / Issue 2/2016
Print ISSN: 0341-2040
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1750
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00408-016-9855-6

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