Mayfield Sara, Jauncey-Cooke Jacqueline, Hough Judith L, Schibler Andreas, Gibbons Kristen, Bogossian Fiona
Paediatric Critical Care Research Group, Mater Children's Hospital, South Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 4101.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Mar 7;2014(3):CD009850. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009850.pub2.
Respiratory support is a central component of the management of critically ill children. It can be delivered invasively via an endotracheal tube or non-invasively via face mask, nasal mask, nasal cannula or oxygen hood/tent. Invasive ventilation can be damaging to the lungs, and the tendency to use non-invasive forms is growing. However, non-invasive delivery is often poorly tolerated by children. High-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) oxygen delivery is a relatively new therapy that shows the potential to reduce the need for intubation and be better tolerated by children than other non-invasive forms of support. HFNC therapy differs from other non-invasive forms of treatment in that it delivers heated, humidified and blended air/oxygen via nasal cannula at rates > 2 L/kg/min. This allows the user to deliver high concentrations of oxygen and to potentially deliver continuous distending pressure; this treatment often is better tolerated by the child.
To determine whether HFNC therapy is more effective than other forms of non-invasive therapy in paediatric patients who require respiratory support.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (2013, Issue 4); MEDLINE via PubMed (January 1966 to April 2013); EMBASE (January 1980 to April 2013); CINAHL (1982 to April 2013); and LILACS (1982 to April 2013). Abstracts from conference proceedings, theses and dissertations and bibliographical references to relevant studies were also searched. We applied no restriction on language.
We planned to included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and quas-randomized trials comparing HFNC therapy with other forms of non-invasive respiratory support for children. Non-invasive support encompassed cot, hood or tent oxygen; low-flow nasal cannulae (flow rates ≤ 2 L/min); and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) or bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP) delivered via facial or nasal mask/cannula. Treatment failure was defined by the need for additional respiratory support. We excluded children with a diagnosis of bronchiolitis.
Two review authors independently assessed all studies for selection and data extraction. We used standard methodological procedures expected by The Cochrane Collaboration.
Our search yielded 922 records. A total of 109 relevant records were retrieved with reference to our search criteria. After duplicates and irrelevant studies were removed, 69 studies were further scrutinized. Of these, 11 studies involved children. No study matched our inclusion criteria.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Based on the results of this review, no evidence is available to allow determination of the safety or effectiveness of HFNC as a form of respiratory support in children.
呼吸支持是危重症儿童治疗的核心组成部分。它可以通过气管插管进行有创通气,也可以通过面罩、鼻罩、鼻导管或氧气头罩/帐篷进行无创通气。有创通气可能会对肺部造成损害,并且使用无创形式的趋势正在增加。然而,儿童对无创通气的耐受性通常较差。高流量鼻导管(HFNC)给氧是一种相对较新的治疗方法,显示出有减少插管需求的潜力,并且比其他无创支持形式更能被儿童耐受。HFNC治疗与其他无创治疗形式的不同之处在于,它通过鼻导管以>2 L/kg/min的速率输送加热、加湿和混合的空气/氧气。这使得使用者能够输送高浓度的氧气,并有可能输送持续扩张压力;这种治疗通常更能被儿童耐受。
确定在需要呼吸支持的儿科患者中,HFNC治疗是否比其他形式的无创治疗更有效。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(2013年第4期);通过PubMed检索MEDLINE(1966年1月至2013年4月);EMBASE(1980年1月至2013年4月);CINAHL(1982年至2013年4月);以及LILACS(1982年至2013年4月)。还检索了会议论文集、论文和学位论文的摘要以及相关研究的参考文献。我们对语言没有限制。
我们计划纳入比较HFNC治疗与其他形式的儿童无创呼吸支持的随机对照试验(RCT)和半随机试验。无创支持包括婴儿床、头罩或帐篷给氧;低流量鼻导管(流速≤2 L/min);以及通过面部或鼻面罩/鼻导管输送的持续气道正压通气(CPAP)或双水平气道正压通气(BiPAP)。治疗失败定义为需要额外的呼吸支持。我们排除了诊断为细支气管炎的儿童。
两位综述作者独立评估所有研究以进行选择和数据提取。我们使用了Cochrane协作网期望的标准方法程序。
我们的检索产生了922条记录。根据我们的检索标准共检索到109条相关记录。在去除重复和不相关的研究后,对69项研究进行了进一步审查。其中,11项研究涉及儿童。没有研究符合我们的纳入标准。
基于本综述的结果,没有证据可用于确定HFNC作为儿童呼吸支持形式的安全性或有效性。