Title: SMCC 3100 A
1SMCC 3100 ABclinical background
2VENTILATOR PATTERN INFLUENCES NEUTROPHIL INFLUX
AND ACTIVATION IN ATELECTASIS-PRONE RABBIT LUNG
- Rabbits, /- lavage, CMVnor, CMVlav, HFOV
- Both the degree of neutrophil activation and lung
injury can be minimized by preventing cyclic
alveolar/airway expansion and collapse in the
surfactant-deficient lung by use of appropriate
ventilator patterns.
Sugiura et al. J. Appl. Physiol. 1994 77 1355 -
1365
3Ventilator Induced Lung Injury
Sugiura M, JAP 1994 771355
4Ventilator Induced Lung Injury
Sugiura M, JAP 1994 771355
5Ventilator Induced Lung Injury
Sugiura M, JAP 1994 771355
6Ventilator Induced Lung Injury
- HFOV Stimulates Significantly Less Neutrophil
Activity Than CMV - Neutrophil Activity Has a Role in the Genesis of
ARDS, Releasing Active Oxygen Species,
Proteinases and Arachidonic Acid Metabolites. - Sugiura M, JAP 1994 771355
7 Matsuoka CMV granulocytes n ö
time function ø J Appl Physiol 1994, 76,
539-544 Imai CMV infl. Mediators ö AmJ
Respir Crit Care Med 1994, 1150,
1550-1554 Takata CMV lung compliance
neutrophils ö morph.changes AmJ
Respir Crit Care Med 1997, 156, 272-279
Mediator release
8c. Clinical trials
9HFOV Prospective Randomized Controlled Trials
- 1. HIFO Study Group. Randomized study of
high-frequency oscillatory ventilation in infants
with severe respiratory distress syndrome. J
Pediatr 1993 122(4)609-19 - 2. Clark RH, Gerstmann DR, Null DM, deLemos
RA. Prospective randomized comparison of
high-frequency oscillatory and conventional
ventilation in respiratory distress syndrome.
Pediatrics 1992 89(1)5-12 - 3. Gerstmann DR, Minton SD, Stoddard RA,
Meredith KS, Bertrand JM. Results of the Provo
multicenter surfactant high frequency oscillatory
ventilatory ventilation controlled trial.
Pediatr Res 1995 37333A (abstract) - 4. Ramanathan R, Ruiz I, Tantivit P, Cayabyab
R, deLemos R. High frequency oscillatory
ventilation compared to conventional mechanical
ventilation in preterm infants with respiratory
distress syndrome. Pediatr Res 1995 37347A
(abstract) - 5. Clark RH, Yoder BA, Sell MS. Prospective,
randomized comparison of high-frequency
oscillation and conventional ventilation in
candidates for extracorporeal membrane
oxygenation. J Pediatr (1994 Mar) 124(3)447-54 - Arnold, JH, et al. Prospective, randomized
comparison of high-frequency oscillatory
ventilation and conventional mechanical
ventilation in pediatric respiratory failure.
Crit Care Med 1994 221530-1539. - 7 Plavka R. et al. Prospective randomized
comparison of conventional mechanical ventilation
and very early high frequency oscillation in
extremely premature newborns with respiratory
distress syndrome. Intensive Care Med 1999 25
68-75. - 8 Rimensberger PC, First intention high
frequency oscillation with very early lung volume
optimization in very low birth weight infants
with respiratory distress syndrome, Pediatrics
Vol. 105 No. 6 June 2000
10HFOV Prospective RCTsOutcomes Summary
- The Randomized Controlled Trials of the 3100A
have Demonstrated that the 3100A - Reduces the severity of CLD in RDS infants
- Decreases the cost of hospitalization for RDS
- Decreases the need for ECMO in eligible
candidates - Decreases air leak in severe RDS
- Improves survival without CLD in pediatric ARDS
11Picu 1 Arnold
- 5 tertiary care PICUs
- patient eligibility
- weight lt 35 kg
- Diagnosis of
- acute diffuse lung injury
- airleak syndrome
Arnold JH et al. Crit Care Med 1994 22 1530 - 39
12Patient outcome
- CV HFOV
- ventilator days 22 20
- new ALS 6 4
- cross-over () 66 38
- survivors () 59 66
- O2 at 30 days () 59 21
p 0.039
Arnold JH et al. Crit Care Med 1994 22 1530 - 39
13Pediatric Randomized Controlled Trial
- At 30 days there were significant differences in
outcome measures that reflected a benefit for the
use of HFOV
14Pediatric Randomized Controlled Trial
- Six month follow-up demonstrated a continued
difference in outcome measures that reflected
significant benefits for the use of HFOV for
Pediatric ARDS
15Pediatric Randomized Controlled Trial
16Outcome
- HFOV with aggresive volume recruitment strategy
results in
significant improvement in oxygenation - Despite higher Paw
- lower frequency of barotrauma
- lower incidence of suppl. O2 at 30 days
- improved outcome c/w CV
Arnold JH et al. Crit Care Med 1994 22 1530 - 39
17HFOV, predictors of survival
- OI at 24 hrs lt 42
- Decreasing OI
MAP/CDP x FiO2 x 100 PaO2
OI
Arnold JH et al. Crit Care Med 1994 22 1530 - 39
18HFOV,from PICU to ICU
19 ICU, the 3100B Pilot Study
17 adult patients with severe ARDS failing
aggressive CMV (including inverse ratio
ventilation), satisfying ECMO criteria
Fort P,et al.HFOV for adult RDS,a Pilot Study.
Crit Care Med 199725937-947
20Outcome
- HFOV with aggressive volume recruitment strategy
results in
significant improvement in oxygenation - Despite higher Paw
- lower frequency of barotrauma
- lower incidence of suppl. O2 at 30 days
- improved outcome c/w CV
- Predictors of survival
- post-treatment OI at 72 hrs
- Increasing OI
21Multicenter Oscillatory ARDS Randomized
Controlled Trial
22Multicenter Oscillatory ARDS Randomized
Controlled Trial
- Comparison of the 3100B Adult HFOV and a Pressure
Control Ventilation approach in severe ARDS in 10
University based centers - Open lung strategies in both arms
- Limited pressures and permissive hypercapnia in
both arms - Entry with a P/F ratio lt200 on PEEP gt 10 cmH2O
23MOAT2 - Exclusion Criteria
- Weight lt 35 kg
- Severe asthma or COPD
- Intractable shock
- Severe airleak (gt 3)
- FiO2 gt 80 for gt 48 hours
- Age lt 16 years
- Non-pulmonary terminal diagnosis
24Patient Demographics - Baseline
HFOV CV N 75 73 Age
48 (17) 51 (18) Kg 78 (25) 81 (26) Apache
II 22 (6) 22 (9) Sepsis 47 47 Pneumonia 19
16 Trauma 21 18 ? immun 12 14 Airl
eak 16 19 NS
25Physiological Parameters - Baseline
HFOV CV N 75 73 PIP 39
(7) 38(8) PEEP 13 (3) 14 (3) mPAW 22
(5) 24 (7) TV (ml/kg) 8.2 (3) 7.8 (3) FiO2
71 (19) 72 (19) PaO2 mmHg 76 (20) 73
(18) PaCO2 mmHg 44 (12) 45 (12) P/F 114
(37) 111 (42) OI 24 (15) 27 (19) MAP mmHg
80 (14) 76 (12) CO lpm 7 (2) 7
(3) NS
26Ventilator Strategies - Goals
- Normalize lung volume
- Minimize peak ventilator pressures
- Physiological targets included
- Oxygen Saturation gt 88
- Delay weaning mPaw until FiO2 lt 50
- pH gt 7.15
- PaCO2 in the range of 40 70 mmHg
27HFOV - Oxygenation Strategy
- Open lung strategy
- Initial mPaw 5, increase in 2-3 cmH2O
increments Q 20 - 30 mins if FiO2 gt 60 until max
45 cmH2O - IT 33
- Goal FiO2 lt 60 with SpO2 gt 88
28HFOV - Ventilation Strategy
- ? P chest wall vibration - increase 10 cm H2O
increments if rising PaCO2 to max ?P of
approximately 90 100 cmH2O - Hz 5 (could decrease to 3 Hz)
- ET cuff leak if rising PaCO2
- Goal pH gt 7.15 and PaCO2 40 - 70 mmHg
29CV - PCV Strategy
- Pressure Control Mode
- TV 6 10 ml/kg (actual body weight)
- PEEP 10 (increment to 18 cm H2O)
- IE 12 to 21 (no Inverse Ratio with PEEPlt 18)
- Goals SpO2 gt 88, PaCO2 40 - 70 mmHg, pH gt 7.15
- Wean PSV when PEEP 5 and FiO2 40
30Strategy Compliance
31Mean PAW - first 72 hours
plt0.001
HFOV
CV
32Clinical Indicators During Treatment
HFOV CMV
time plt 0.01, vent plt 0.001
33Outcomes
34Retrospective Analysis - Outcome Stratified by
Median PIP ? 38 cm H20
HFOV CV N 38 42 PIP 33
(5) 32 (4) PEEP 13 (3) 13 (3) TV
(ml/kg) 8.5 (.3) 7.9 (.2) PaO2/FiO2 115
(39) 120 (37) OI 22 (17) 21 (14) APACHE
II 21 (6) 20 (7) Sepsis 45 45 Mortality
30 d 26 52 Mortality 6 mo 39 62
Plt0.018 Plt0.045
35Survival - PIP ? 38 cm H20 (post-hoc)
30d p0.019 90d p0.026
HFOV
CV
36Overall Survival
30d p0.057 90d p0.078
HFOV
CV
37Outcomes
38MOAT2 - Secondary Outcomes
HFOV CV N 75 73 ? BP 0 3 Airleak 9
12 O2 Failure 5 8 OIgt42 at gt48h pH lt
7.15 5 8 Mucus Plug 5 4 NS
39Post-Hoc Analysis Predictors of Outcome
- Oxygenation Index Response
- Entry Indicators of Compliance (Peak Inspiratory
Pressure)
40Predictors of Outcome
- OI at 16 hours was the only significant
predictor of mortality in a stepwise logistic
regression analysis. - Risk of death increases 2 for every OI increase
of 1 at 16 hours - e.g., Patients with OI of 25 have a 55 risk of
death, for those with an OI of 15 its only 35
41Conclusions
- HFOV associated with relative reduction in 1 mo
mortality of 29 (P0.098) and 6 mo mortality 20
(P0.143) - No significant difference HFOV vs CV in airleak,
hypotension, oxygenation failure, ventilation
failure or mucus plug - Data supports effectiveness and safety of HFOV
for ARDS
42HFO as Lung Protective Ventilation Strategy in
ARDS
Department of Anaesthesiology Johannes Gutenberg
University Mainz, Germany
43N42 Jan. 1998 April 2001 Primary Study
Endpoint Improvement of oxygenation HFOV
adverse events Secondary Study Endpoint 30 day
mortality
44Patient selection Patients with oxygenation
disorder meeting following criteria Failure of
conventional ventilation No heartfailure No
severe obstructive lung disease Body weight 35 kg
or more Exlusion Pregnancy Death expected
within 24 hrs
45Failure CMV PaO2/FiO2 ratio lt 200 mmHg No
improvement over 2hrs with optimized
PCV (Improvement increase PaO2/FiO2 ratio at
least 50 PCV Max PEEP 15 cmH2O Max
Insp. Airway Press. 35 cmH2O Rate IE
Ratio set to avoid intrinsic PEEP PaCO2
rise permitted to art. PH of 7.20
Recuitment Maneuvers allowed and performed
routinely
46Recuitment Maneuvers Respirator switched to
CPAP Mode CPAP 40 cmH2O for 30 seconds After
maneuver PEEP increased to 3-5 cmH2O above
initial If improvement repeated up to Max PEEP
of 15 cmH2O
47If at 2hrs after optimized conventional PCV no
improvement in oxygenation, patient was
allocated to HFOV
Initial Settings HFOV FiO2 of 1.0 CDP 5 cmH2O
above last MAP of conventional ventilation Insp.
of 33 Freq. 5 Hz Bias Flow 30 ltr/min Oscill
amplitude depending of body weight (later
titrated to target PaCO2
48CDP Management
- Lung volume recruitment by stepwise increase CDP
up to 40 cmH2O - CDP increased as long as PaO2 increased
- If PaO2 decreased after raising CDP, trend in
PaO2 was analyzed - Pos. trend in PaO2 considered as slow recruitment
- Decrease of PaO2 without pos. trend signalized no
further recruitment - (overdistension of ventilated
compartments of the lung) - Consequently CDP was reduced
- After achieving max. recruitment lowest possible
CDP sought in order to - keep the lung open.
- (CDP reduced to the point of lung collapse, seen
as PaO2 decrease and - then adjusted 2 3 cmH2O above this
point
49Amplitude Management
- Targeted PaCO2 between 35 and 80 cmH2O
- Art. pH more than 7.20
- Art Bicarb. more than 19 mmol/L
- Adjusted by increasing (hypercapnia) / decreasing
oscillation amplitude -
(hypocapnia) - Consisting hypercapnia despite oscillation
amplitude of more than 90, - oscillation frequency was reduced in steps of
0.5, to a lower limit of 3 Hz
50Hypotension defined as MAP less than 60 mmHg for
2 hrs. After changing to HFOV or related to
increase of CDP
HFOV was stopped if hypotension remained
unresponsive to optimization of filling
pressures, vasoactive and/or inotropic support
51- Weaning HFOV
- Immediately after steady state, weaning started.
- First by weaning FiO2
- Second by stepwise reduction of CDP
- Patients with improved and stable oxygenation
requiring FiO2 lt 0.6 - and a CDP lt 25 cmH2O were weaned to
conventional ventilator - PCV settings according to CDP level on HFOV
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63Changing Medical Practice
- Changing Medical Practice is the Most Difficult
Task - 6 ml/kg tidal volume ventilation for ARDS
- Rubenfeld GD, et al ATS 2001
- Reasons of Non-Compliance
- Reluctance to give up control to a protocol
- Patient comfort
- Acidosis
- Oxygenation
- Therefore
- Most patients with ARDS are not managed with LPV
- HFOV has the potential to remove most barriers to
use of LPV