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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03406572

Use of Nasal High Flow Oxygen During Breaks of Non-invasive Ventilation for Patients With Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure

Comparison of High Flow Nasal Cannula Oxygen and Conventional Oxygen Therapy on Ventilatory Support Duration During Acute-on-chronic Respiratory Failure: a Multicenter, Randomized, Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
161 (actual)
Sponsor
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Chronic respiratory insufficiency and COPD are the third leading cause of death worldwide. Patients decompensate at various stages of their disease and exhibit acute-on-chronic respiratory failure (ACRF), a frequent cause of ICU hospitalization for hypercapnic acute respiratory failure (ARF). Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) is the first line ventilatory treatment for hypercapnic ARF. It is applied intermittently, separated by periods of spontaneous breathing (SB) with standard oxygen (O2). Standard O2 has drawbacks that limit the benefit of intermittent NIV in hypercapnic ARF: limited gas flow which is well below the patient's inspiratory flow rate, limited capacity and efficiency of oxygenation with non-controlled FiO2 (risk of excessive oxygen and induced hypercapnia), and cold and dry gas leading to discomfort and under-humidification of the airways and tracheobronchial secretions. Benefits in terms of work of breathing and CO2 removal resulting from PEEP and pressure support applied during NIV periods could be rapidly lost during standard O2. Recently, use of high-flow heated and humidified nasal oxygen therapy (HFHO) has gained enthusiasm among intensivists to manage ARF. HFHO delivers high flows (up to 60L/min, that generate moderate PEEP) of heated and humidified oxygen at a controlled and adjustable FiO2 (21 to 100%) that rapidly improve respiratory distress symptoms, oxygenation, respiratory comfort and outcome of patients with hypoxemic ARF. These unique features of HFHO could overcome some of the drawbacks of standard O2 during SB periods in hypercapnic ARF. Indeed, PEEP effect, washout of nasopharyngeal dead-space limiting CO2 re-breathing and inspired gas conditioning preserving adequate mucosal function and secretion removal, could potentially contribute to decrease airways resistance, intrinsic PEEP and work of breathing, while improving patient comfort. Investigators aim to determine if the use of HFHO, as compared to standard O2, increases the number of ventilator-free days (VFDs) and alive at day 28 in patients with hypercapnic ARF admitted in an ICU, an intermediate care, or a respiratory care unit, and requiring NIV.

Detailed description

In both groups, treatment will start with a first NIV session of 2 hours, with arterial blood gas measurement between one hour and two hours after initiating the NIV session. The NIV will be extended for those patients with a pH \< 7.30. In both groups, patients will be assessed for their tolerance of NIV and their ability to switch to spontaneous breathing every hour +/- 30 min, except during sleep (10 pm-8 am); they will be assessed for their tolerance of spontaneous breathing and for the need of resumption of NIV every 2 hours+/- 30 min and every 4 +/- 1 hours thereafter. To ensure the consistency of indications of NIV and invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) across centers and reduce potential bias, NIV and IMV will be initiated and stopped in the same way in the two groups, using predefined criteria. * Inclusion (day 0): informed consent, randomisation (HFHO group/standard O2 group), NIV initiation (for 2 hours), clinical and paraclinical exam including ABG, data collection * Follow-up (day 1 to day 28) : NIV, clinical exam, ABG, data collection

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEHFHO Group* Common name: humidifier with integrated flow generator that delivers high flow warmed and humidified respiratory gases * Brand name: Airvo 2
DEVICEStandard O2Standard oxygen therapy

Timeline

Start date
2018-05-18
Primary completion
2023-06-18
Completion
2023-08-18
First posted
2018-01-23
Last updated
2023-09-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03406572. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.