Trabajo de grado - Maestría
Alternatives to conventional invasive ventilation in viral acute respiratory distress syndrome: a systematic review
Fecha
2023-06-07Registro en:
instname:Universidad de los Andes
reponame:Repositorio Institucional Séneca
Autor
Carreño Hernández, Fredy Leonardo
Institución
Resumen
Rationale: The COVID-19 pandemic caused a shortage of respiratory ventilators, making it
essential to explore alternatives to Invasive Mechanical Ventilation (IMV) for patients with
acute respiratory distress syndrome caused by respiratory viruses.
Objectives: This study aimed to assess the safety and effectiveness of alternative
ventilation strategies compared to IMV in such patients. The primary outcome was mortality.
Methods: A systematic review following the Cochrane guidelines and PRISMA checklist
was done, searching on Medline, Cochrane CENTRAL and Embase for indexed literature
and regulatory agencies for gray literature. The studies included compared at least one
ventilatory alternative, such as High-Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC), Non-Invasive Mechanical
Ventilation (NIMV), or Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP), to IMV. A weighted
mortality Odds ratio (OR) was calculated, and meta-analysis performed if heterogeneity was
low.
Measurements/Main Results: Forty-seven studies met the inclusion criteria, including 36
non-randomized, 2 trials, and 9 congress abstracts. From the 36 non-randomized and 9
abstracts, 13 were for NIMV, 7 for CPAP, 6 for HFNC, 5 evaluated multiple interventions
simultaneously, and 13 did not correctly distinguish between interventions. OR weighted
mortality for NIMV was 0.48 [0.36, 0.64], HFNC had an OR of 0.33 [0.18, 0.57], and CPAP
had an OR of 0.53 [0.34, 0.84]. No meta-analysis was performed, and GRADE evaluation
showed that the evidence was of very low certainty.
Conclusions: NIMV, HFNC, and CPAP reduce mortality in ARDS caused by respiratory
viruses, but the high heterogeneity between studies and the lack of randomized controlled
trials (RCTs) highlights the need for further research.