• Respiratory care · Mar 2024

    Factors Associated With Successful Extubation Readiness Testing in Children With Congenital Heart Disease.

    • Andrew G Miller, Jessica Brown, Olivia Marshburn, Dirk Mattin, Jeanette Muddiman, Karan R Kumar, Veerajalandhar Allareddy, and Alexandre T Rotta.
    • Mr Miller, Dr Kumar, Dr Allareddy, and Dr Rotta are affiliated with the Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. Mr Miller, Ms Brown, Ms Marshburn, Mr. Mattin, and Ms Muddiman are affiliated with the Respiratory Care Services, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. Dr Kumar is affiliated with the Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina. Andrew.g.miller@duke.edu.
    • Respir Care. 2024 Mar 27; 69 (4): 407414407-414.

    BackgroundIn children with congenital heart disease, extubation readiness testing (ERT) is performed to evaluate the potential for liberation from mechanical ventilation. There is a paucity of data that suggests what mechanical ventilation parameters are associated with successful ERT. We hypothesized that ERT success would be associated with certain mechanical ventilator parameters.MethodsData on daily ERT assessments were recorded as part of a quality improvement project. In accordance with our respiratory therapist-driven ventilator protocol, patients were assessed daily for ERT eligibility and tested daily, if eligible. Mechanical ventilation parameters were categorized a priori to evaluate the differences in levels of respiratory support. The primary outcome was ERT success.ResultsA total of 780 ERTs from 320 subjects (median [interquartile range] age 2.5 [0.6-6.5] months and median weight [interquartile range] 4.2 [3.3-6.9] kg) were evaluated. A total of 528 ERTs (68%) were passed, 306 successful ERTs (58%) resulted in extubation, and 30 subjects (9.4%) were re-intubated. There were statistically significant differences in the ERT pass rate for ventilator mode, peak inspiratory pressure, Δ pressure, PEEP, mean airway pressure ([Formula: see text]), and dead-space-to-tidal-volume ratio (all P < .001) but not for [Formula: see text]. ERT success decreased with increases in peak inspiratory pressure, Δ pressure, PEEP, [Formula: see text], and dead-space-to-tidal-volume ratio. Logistic regression revealed neonates, Δ pressure ≥ 11 cm H2O, and [Formula: see text] > 10 cm H2O were associated with a decreased odds of ERT success, whereas children ages 1-5 years and an [Formula: see text] of 0.31-0.40 had increased odds of ERT success.ConclusionsERT pass rates decreased as ventilator support increased; however, some subjects were able to pass ERT despite high ventilator support. We found that [Formula: see text] was associated with ERT success and that protocols should consider using [Formula: see text] instead of PEEP thresholds for ERT eligibility. Cyanotic lesions were not associated with ERT success, which suggests that patients with cyanotic heart disease can be included in ERT protocols.Copyright © 2024 by Daedalus Enterprises.

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