Jurnal Reading Tracheostomy - COVID DHO
Jurnal Reading Tracheostomy - COVID DHO
Jurnal Reading Tracheostomy - COVID DHO
1791022014
Introduction
Sample :
‒ Consecutive patients (age ≥ 18 yr old) admitted to the ICU at Guy’s and St Thomas’
National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust between March 3, 2020, and May 5,
2020.
‒ Diagnosed with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19
‒ Critically ill with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure receiving MV, of whom some
underwent tracheostomy
Exclusion criteria:
‒ tracheostomy for indications other than prolonged respiratory wean
‒ baseline data were unavailable
Data Collection
For the purposes of analysis, the cohort were catogorized into four groups:
1. tracheostomy/alive (TT/A)
2. tracheostomy/died (TT/D)
3. no tracheostomy/alive (nTT/A), and
4. no tracheostomy/dead (nTT/D).
Study Objectives
– 176 patients were included for analysis with an overall mortality rate of 25%
(44 nonsurvivors).
– Eighty-seven (49.4%) underwent tracheostomy at a median of 16 days (13–21
d) post intubation, and there were seven deaths (8.0%).
– For patients undergoing tracheostomy, the total duration of MV was 30 days
(25–36 d).
– Of the 89 patients (50.6%) who did not receive a tracheostomy, 52 (58.4%)
were successfully liberated from MV by day 7 (3–10.5), and 37 (41.6%) died at
day 10 (6–13).
Table 1.
Baseline characteristics,
disease-specific sequelae,
and Outcomes
Clinical Course
nTT/A group:
– Median (range) baseline PEEP score, PF ratio, and CRP were 10 cm H2O (8–12
cm H2O), 178.9 mm Hg (101.1–318.3 mm Hg), and 124 mg/L (45–245 mg/L),
respectively.
– The last measurement before stopping MV was median (range) 7 cm H2O (5–10
cm H2O) (PEEP), 247.5 mm Hg (72.3–309.7 mmHg) (PF ratio), and 78 mg/L (29–
296 mg/L) (CRP).
Clinical Course
– nTT/D group:
– the day of death group was 10 (6– 14)
– severely unwell patients deteriorate rapidly despite maximal therapy
Optimal Timing for
Consideration of
Tracheostomy Insertion
– Using Kaplan-Meier estimates —> days (since
start of MV) when survival in nTT/D group and
probability of not being extubated in nTT/A
group dropped to 10%.
– These served as lower and upper bound of
optimal timing window. By these criteria, the
optimal time window for consideration of
tracheostomy is day 13–17 post intubation.
Factors Associated With
Tracheostomy Insertion
– Factors significantly associated with tracheostomy insertion: PEEP, PaO2, PF
ratio, radiological lung fibrosis, and thromboembolism
– Multiple binary regression analysis displayed PF ratio (OR, 0.98; 95% CI [0.95–
0.99]; p = 0.008) and presence of fibrosis on CT scan (OR, 13.26; 95% CI [3.61–
48.91]; p ≤ 0.0001) as independently associated factors
Predictors of In-Hospital Mortality as Adverse
Factors for Tracheostomy
– The time to death for nonsurvivors in our study was 10 days (6–14 d)
(consistent with other studies of this population)
– Waiting until after day 13, when probability of being extubated reached 90%
minimize futility and reduce the potential of performing unnecessary
procedures on patients likely to recover irrespective of intervention.
– Some patients with COVID-19 develop a severe hyperinflammatory state that is
associated with cytokine storm syndrome (CRP, ferritin, and persistent pyrexia)
– The limiting factors specific to this analysis were a relatively small sample size
and increased disease complexity But the accuracy was adequate to provide
decision support for clinicians or at least provide them a second opinion