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Observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in COVID-19

BACKGROUND: The role of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) in severe COVID-19 remains a matter of debate. Therefore, the utilization and outcome of NIV in COVID-19 in an unbiased cohort was determined. AIM: The aim was to provide a detailed account of hospitalized COVID-19 patients requiring non-invasiv...

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Autores principales: Karagiannidis, Christian, Hentschker, Corinna, Westhoff, Michael, Weber-Carstens, Steffen, Janssens, Uwe, Kluge, Stefan, Pfeifer, Michael, Spies, Claudia, Welte, Tobias, Rossaint, Rolf, Mostert, Carina, Windisch, Wolfram
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8759661/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35030205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262315
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author Karagiannidis, Christian
Hentschker, Corinna
Westhoff, Michael
Weber-Carstens, Steffen
Janssens, Uwe
Kluge, Stefan
Pfeifer, Michael
Spies, Claudia
Welte, Tobias
Rossaint, Rolf
Mostert, Carina
Windisch, Wolfram
author_facet Karagiannidis, Christian
Hentschker, Corinna
Westhoff, Michael
Weber-Carstens, Steffen
Janssens, Uwe
Kluge, Stefan
Pfeifer, Michael
Spies, Claudia
Welte, Tobias
Rossaint, Rolf
Mostert, Carina
Windisch, Wolfram
author_sort Karagiannidis, Christian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The role of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) in severe COVID-19 remains a matter of debate. Therefore, the utilization and outcome of NIV in COVID-19 in an unbiased cohort was determined. AIM: The aim was to provide a detailed account of hospitalized COVID-19 patients requiring non-invasive ventilation during their hospital stay. Furthermore, differences of patients treated with NIV between the first and second wave are explored. METHODS: Confirmed COVID-19 cases of claims data of the Local Health Care Funds with non-invasive and/or invasive mechanical ventilation (MV) in the spring and autumn pandemic period in 2020 were comparable analysed. RESULTS: Nationwide cohort of 17.023 cases (median/IQR age 71/61–80 years, 64% male) 7235 (42.5%) patients primarily received IMV without NIV, 4469 (26.3%) patients received NIV without subsequent intubation, and 3472 (20.4%) patients had NIV failure (NIV-F), defined by subsequent endotracheal intubation. The proportion of patients who received invasive MV decreased from 75% to 37% during the second period. Accordingly, the proportion of patients with NIV exclusively increased from 9% to 30%, and those failing NIV increased from 9% to 23%. Median length of hospital stay decreased from 26 to 21 days, and duration of MV decreased from 11.9 to 7.3 days. The NIV failure rate decreased from 49% to 43%. Overall mortality increased from 51% versus 54%. Mortality was 44% with NIV-only, 54% with IMV and 66% with NIV-F with mortality rates steadily increasing from 62% in early NIV-F (day 1) to 72% in late NIV-F (>4 days). CONCLUSIONS: Utilization of NIV rapidly increased during the autumn period, which was associated with a reduced duration of MV, but not with overall mortality. High NIV-F rates are associated with increased mortality, particularly in late NIV-F.
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spelling pubmed-87596612022-01-15 Observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in COVID-19 Karagiannidis, Christian Hentschker, Corinna Westhoff, Michael Weber-Carstens, Steffen Janssens, Uwe Kluge, Stefan Pfeifer, Michael Spies, Claudia Welte, Tobias Rossaint, Rolf Mostert, Carina Windisch, Wolfram PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The role of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) in severe COVID-19 remains a matter of debate. Therefore, the utilization and outcome of NIV in COVID-19 in an unbiased cohort was determined. AIM: The aim was to provide a detailed account of hospitalized COVID-19 patients requiring non-invasive ventilation during their hospital stay. Furthermore, differences of patients treated with NIV between the first and second wave are explored. METHODS: Confirmed COVID-19 cases of claims data of the Local Health Care Funds with non-invasive and/or invasive mechanical ventilation (MV) in the spring and autumn pandemic period in 2020 were comparable analysed. RESULTS: Nationwide cohort of 17.023 cases (median/IQR age 71/61–80 years, 64% male) 7235 (42.5%) patients primarily received IMV without NIV, 4469 (26.3%) patients received NIV without subsequent intubation, and 3472 (20.4%) patients had NIV failure (NIV-F), defined by subsequent endotracheal intubation. The proportion of patients who received invasive MV decreased from 75% to 37% during the second period. Accordingly, the proportion of patients with NIV exclusively increased from 9% to 30%, and those failing NIV increased from 9% to 23%. Median length of hospital stay decreased from 26 to 21 days, and duration of MV decreased from 11.9 to 7.3 days. The NIV failure rate decreased from 49% to 43%. Overall mortality increased from 51% versus 54%. Mortality was 44% with NIV-only, 54% with IMV and 66% with NIV-F with mortality rates steadily increasing from 62% in early NIV-F (day 1) to 72% in late NIV-F (>4 days). CONCLUSIONS: Utilization of NIV rapidly increased during the autumn period, which was associated with a reduced duration of MV, but not with overall mortality. High NIV-F rates are associated with increased mortality, particularly in late NIV-F. Public Library of Science 2022-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8759661/ /pubmed/35030205 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262315 Text en © 2022 Karagiannidis et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Karagiannidis, Christian
Hentschker, Corinna
Westhoff, Michael
Weber-Carstens, Steffen
Janssens, Uwe
Kluge, Stefan
Pfeifer, Michael
Spies, Claudia
Welte, Tobias
Rossaint, Rolf
Mostert, Carina
Windisch, Wolfram
Observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in COVID-19
title Observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in COVID-19
title_full Observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in COVID-19
title_fullStr Observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in COVID-19
title_short Observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in COVID-19
title_sort observational study of changes in utilization and outcomes in mechanical ventilation in covid-19
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8759661/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35030205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262315
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