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Not Yet RecruitingNCT05282238

Quantification of Inspiratory Effort Through Nasal Pressure in Patients Undergoing Weaning From Invasive Mechanical Ventilation and Correlation With Clinical Outcomes

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
175 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Modena and Reggio Emilia · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Weaning from invasive mechanical ventilation (MV) constitutes a fundamental procedure in intensive care, covering up to 50% of time spent on ventilation (1). Endotracheal tube (ETT) removal might be an important but delicate step in intensive care setting. Failure and subsequent need for re-intubation can occur in up to 20% of cases leading to a significant increase in mortality rates (24%), longer hospital stay and prolonged need for ventilation. Comorbidities such as obesity, COPD and cardiac related diseases might further increase this risk reaching up to 60% of failure in extubation. In this scenario, accurate predictors of weaning failure are far welcomed. The recurrence of respiratory failure after extubation might considerably raise rates of failure, probably due to increased work of breathing in patients after ETT removal. Most recent guidelines on the use of non-invasive ventilation (NIV) suggest using NIV after ETT removal in subjects with high risk of failure. NIV could contribute to reduce work of breathing hence preventing the onset of respiratory failure after extubation. Therefore, measuring inspiratory effort and its variation in weaned patients might help in identifying patients with significant risk of failing extubation. Esophageal pressure swings (DeltaPES) can be measured through a nasogastric tube with a pressure transducer located in the inferior part of the esophagus. DeltaPES is an extremely precise and accurate method to quantify inspiratory effort, however its use in daily clinical practice is limited due to the invasive nature of the maneuver, elevated costs and need for considerable clinical training of operators. Physiological studies have shown a correlation between nasal pressure measured at nostril entrance and esophageal pressure (which in turn is a measure of respiratory effort . Therefore, measuring nasal pressure could represent a method to quantify inspiratory effort non-invasively, proving to be useful in daily clinical practice.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTNasal pressure assessmentOnce the patient is enrolled nasal pressure will be measured through a dedicated pressure line located at the nostril entrance and connected to a dedicated pressure transducer (OptiVentTM, SIDAM, Mirandola, Italy). Measured nasal pressure will be the result of the variation between inspiratory and expiratory pressure (DeltaPnose). The measurement of DeltaPnose will be obtained considering the average of 3 values registered during 3 breath after at least 3 minutes of stable and constant respiratory pattern. Pnose values will be measured before extubation (T0) and 30 minutes (T1), 2 hours (T2), 4 hours (T3), 12 hours (T4) , 24 hours (T5) and 48 hours (T6) after extubation.

Timeline

Start date
2027-05-01
Primary completion
2030-05-01
Completion
2033-12-31
First posted
2022-03-16
Last updated
2025-04-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05282238. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.