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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07189338

Apneic Oxygenation With High-flow Nasal Oxygenation After Preoxygenation With Noninvasive Ventilation Before Intubation in Hypoxemic Patients in Intensive Care Unit.

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
500 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Tours · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of this clinical study is to assess whether apneic oxygenation with High-Flow Nasal Oxygen (HFNO) would decrease the incidence of severe hypoxemia compared to no apneic oxygenation during the intubation procedure (from the start of laryngoscopy to 5 minutes after successful intubation) in patients with hypoxemic acute respiratory failure. The sponsor expects that apneic oxygenation (between the laryngoscopy and the success of intubation) with HFNO compared to no apneic oxygenation could decrease the risk of severe hypoxemia after intubation in hypoxemic critical ill patients. Participants will be enrolled according to eligibility criteria and randomized into one of the following groups: Experimental group : Apneic oxygenation will be used with HFNO between the laryngoscopy and the successful intubation (study intervention). non-invasive ventilation (NIV) alone will be used for the preoxygenation and hypoventilation phase until the laryngoscopy. The nasal cannulas of HFNO will be placed on hold beneath the patient's chin (with HFNO on and set with a flow at 60-70L.min-1, FiO2 1.0) pending laryngoscopy began. At the time of laryngoscopy: after removing the facemask of NIV, the nasal cannulas for HFNO will be placed in the patient's nares then the laryngoscopy will be performed. Control group: The control group will receive usual care, i.e., no oxygen during the apneic phase (between the laryngoscopy and the success of the intubation procedure) During the preoxygenation and hypoventilation phase until laryngoscopy, NIV alone will be used as in the experimental group.

Detailed description

Endotracheal intubation is often performed in intensive care unit (ICU). Severe complications (such as severe hypoxemia, hypotension, cardiac arrest) occur up to 50%. Severe hypoxemia is more frequent in patients with hypoxemia prior to intubation or during difficult intubation and could increase the risk of cardiac arrest. The procedure of intubation includes, in order 1) a preoxygenation phase ending with iv administration of anesthetic drugs 2) a hypoventilation phase 3) an apneic phase beginning with laryngoscopy and ending with successful intubation 4) mechanical ventilation. Optimization of this procedure is essential. Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) is recommended for preoxygenation in hypoxemic patients and this technique can maintain ventilation during the hypoventilation phase. Apneic oxygenation is defined as the administration of oxygen during the apneic phase. The objective is to increase the duration of apnea without desaturation. In physiological studies and in the operating room, when apneic oxygen is used with standard oxygen (up to 15L/min) or high-flow nasal oxygenation (HFNO) (up to 70L/min and FiO2 at 1.0), the apnea length without desaturation can reach several minutes. Several meta-analyses (with high heterogeneity between studies) found that apneic oxygenation (including standard oxygen or HFNO) in emergency intubation could decrease the risk of hypoxemia. In most studies that investigated the effect of HFNO as apneic oxygenation, HFNO was also used as a preoxygenation method. Thus, the different methods of preoxygenation could affect the real effect of apneic oxygenation. Only one single-center study evaluated apneic oxygenation with HFNO after preoxygenation by NIV. In this study the lowest SpO2 during intubation procedure was significantly higher in the apneic oxygenation group. However, in this study the mask used for NIV was applied over the nasal cannulas of HFNO, which may have resulted in less efficient preoxygenation due to leakage. Intubation rate for HFNO failure during acute respiratory failure is about 40% in ICU patients. The question of continuing HFNO or not during the apnea phase remains open. The experts suggest continuing HFNO during intubation (conditional recommendation, moderate certainty). We hypothesized that apneic oxygenation (between the laryngoscopy and the success of intubation) with HFNO compared to no apneic oxygenation could decrease the risk of severe hypoxemia after intubation in hypoxemic critical ill patients. In both groups, NIV will be used during the preoxygenation and hypoventilation phases. Procedure of intubation will be standardized according to guidelines * Preoxygenation will be performed using NIV through a facemask in both group 1. Experimental group: The nasal cannulas of HFNO will be placed on hold beneath the patient's chin (with HFNO on and set with a flow at 60-70L.min-1, FiO2 1.0) pending laryngoscopy began. 2. Control group: no HFNO * Rapide sequence induction (etomidate or ketamine + succinylcholine or rocuronium) * Hypoventilation phase will be continue in both groupe for 1min using NIV through a facemask * At the time of laryngoscopy : 1. Experimental group: after removing the facemask of NIV, the nasal cannulas for HFNO will be placed in the patient's nares then the laryngoscopy will be performed. 2. Control group: After removing the facemask, laryngoscopy will be performed without oxygen. * recommandation of using a videolaryngoscope with a bougie or stylet * Use of capnography to confirm the success of procedure * initiate or increase vasopressors if needed * Initiation of long-term sedation * Initiation protective ventilation

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREApneic oxygenation* Preoxygenation will be performed using NIV for 3-5 min With nasal cannulas placed in standby beneath the patient's chin (with HFNO on and set with a flow at 60-70L.min-1, FiO2 1.0) * Rapide sequence induction * Hypoventilation phase will be continue for 1 min using NIV * At the time of laryngoscopy : After removing the facemask, the nasal cannulas of HFNO will be placed in the patient's nares then the laryngoscopy will be performed. \* Use of capnography to confirm the success of procedure
PROCEDUREUsual Care* Preoxygenation will be performed using NIV for 3-5 min without HFNO * Rapide sequence induction * Hypoventilation phase will be continue using NIV for 1min * At the time of laryngoscopy : After removing the facemask, laryngoscopy will be performed without oxygen. \* Use of capnography to confirm the success of procedure

Timeline

Start date
2025-10-30
Primary completion
2028-10-30
Completion
2028-11-30
First posted
2025-09-23
Last updated
2025-09-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07189338. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.