Artigo Revisado por pares

Extubation failure in pediatric intensive care: A multiple-center study of risk factors and outcomes

2003; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 31; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1097/01.ccm.0000094228.90557.85

ISSN

1530-0293

Autores

Stephen C. Kurachek, Christopher J. L. Newth, Michael W. Quasney, Tom B. Rice, Ramesh Sachdeva, Neal Patel, Jeanne S. Takano, Larry W. Easterling, Matthew C. Scanlon, Ndidiamaka Musa, Richard J. Brilli, Dan Wells, Gary S. Park, Scott Penfil, Kris Bysani, Michael Nares, Lia Lowrie, Michael Billow, Emilie Chiochetti, Bruce R. Lindgren,

Tópico(s)

Respiratory Support and Mechanisms

Resumo

Objective To determine a contemporary failed extubation rate, risk factors, and consequences of extubation failure in pediatric intensive care units (PICUs). Three hypotheses were investigated: a) Extubation failure is in part disease specific; b) preexisting respiratory conditions predispose to extubation failure; and c) admission acuity scoring does not affect extubation failure. Design Twelve-month prospective, observational, clinical study. Setting Sixteen diverse PICUs in the United States. Patients Patients were 2,794 patients from the newborn period to 18 yrs of age experiencing a planned extubation trial. Interventions None. Measurements and Main Results A descriptive statistical analysis was performed, and outcome differences of the failed extubation population were determined. The extubation failure rate was 6.2% (174 of 2,794; 95% confidence interval, 5.3–7.1). Patient features associated with extubation failure (p < .05) included age ≤24 months; dysgenetic condition; syndromic condition; chronic respiratory disorder; chronic neurologic condition; medical or surgical airway condition; chronic noninvasive positive pressure ventilation; the need to replace the endotracheal tube on admission to the PICU; and the use of racemic epinephrine, steroids, helium-oxygen therapy (heliox), or noninvasive positive pressure ventilation within 24 hrs of extubation. Patients failing extubation had longer pre-extubation intubation time (failed, 148.7 hrs, sd ± 207.8 vs. success, 107.9 hrs, sd ± 171.3; p < .001), longer PICU length of stay (17.5 days, sd ± 15.6 vs. 7.6 days, sd ± 11.1; p < .001), and a higher mortality rate than patients not failing extubation (4.0% vs. 0.8%; p < .001). Failure was found to be in part disease specific, and preexisting respiratory conditions were found to predispose to failure whereas admission acuity did not. Conclusion A variety of patient features are associated with an increase in extubation failure rate, and serious outcome consequences characterize the extubation failure population in PICUs.

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