Department of Pediatrics, Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX.
Crit Care Med. 2015 Nov;43(11):2446-51. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000001261.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shifted the focus of surveillance paradigm for adult patients receiving mechanical ventilation, moving from the current standard of ventilator-associated pneumonia to broader complications. The surveillance definitions were designed to enable objective measures and efficient processes, so as to facilitate quality improvement initiatives and enhance standardized benchmark comparisons. We evaluated the surveillance definitions in term of their ability to predict clinical outcomes and ease of surveillance in a PICU.
Retrospective cohort study.
A PICU at a university-affiliated children's hospital.
Eight hundred thirty-six patients receiving mechanical ventilation over 1-year period.
None.
We applied the definition for ventilator-associated condition (i.e., a sustained increase in ventilator setting after a period of stable or decreasing support) to our database. Of total 606 patients, 14.5% had ventilator-associated condition (20.9/1,000 ventilator days) and 8.1% had an infection-related ventilator-associated condition (12.9/1,000 ventilator days). The patients with infection-related ventilator-associated condition were classified into probable pneumonia (55%), possible pneumonia (28.6%), and undetermined infection (16.3%). A large portion of patients with ventilator-associated condition (44%) had other noninfectious etiologies (e.g., atelectasis, pulmonary edema, and shock). Patients who developed ventilator-associated condition had significantly longer ventilatory, ICU, and hospital days compared with those who did not. The ventilator-associated condition group had increased hospital mortality compared with the non-ventilator-associated condition group (19.3% vs 6.9%; p=0.0007). Multivariate regression analysis identified ventilator-associated condition as one of the predictors of hospital mortality with an adjusted odds ratio of 2.14 (95% CI, 1.03-4.42). Risk factors for developing a ventilator-associated condition included immunocompromised status (odds ratio, 2.90; 95% CI, 1.57-5.33), tracheostomy dependence (odds ratio, 2.78; 95% CI, 1.40-5.51), and chronic respiratory disease (odds ratio, 1.85; 95% CI, 1.03-3.3).
The definitions for the various ventilator-associated conditions are good predictors of outcomes in children and adults and are amenable to automated surveillance. Based on the study findings, we suggest consideration for shifting the focus of surveillance for ventilator-associated events from only pneumonia to a broader range of complications.
疾病控制与预防中心将成人机械通气患者监测模式的重点从当前的呼吸机相关性肺炎标准转移到更广泛的并发症。监测定义旨在实现客观测量和高效流程,从而促进质量改进计划并增强标准化基准比较。我们评估了在儿科重症监护病房(PICU)中预测临床结果和便于监测的监测定义。
回顾性队列研究。
一所大学附属儿童医院的 PICU。
在一年期间接受机械通气的 836 名患者。
无。
我们将呼吸机相关条件的定义(即稳定或减少支持后呼吸机设置持续增加)应用于我们的数据库。在总共 606 名患者中,14.5%的患者出现呼吸机相关条件(20.9/1000 通气日),8.1%的患者出现感染相关的呼吸机相关条件(12.9/1000 通气日)。感染相关呼吸机相关条件的患者分为可能肺炎(55%)、疑似肺炎(28.6%)和未确定感染(16.3%)。很大一部分呼吸机相关条件患者(44%)有其他非传染性病因(如肺不张、肺水肿和休克)。与未发生呼吸机相关条件的患者相比,发生呼吸机相关条件的患者通气、ICU 和住院时间明显更长。与非呼吸机相关条件组相比,呼吸机相关条件组的住院死亡率更高(19.3%比 6.9%;p=0.0007)。多变量回归分析将呼吸机相关条件确定为住院死亡率的预测因素之一,调整后的优势比为 2.14(95%CI,1.03-4.42)。发生呼吸机相关条件的危险因素包括免疫功能低下(优势比,2.90;95%CI,1.57-5.33)、气管切开依赖(优势比,2.78;95%CI,1.40-5.51)和慢性呼吸系统疾病(优势比,1.85;95%CI,1.03-3.3)。
各种呼吸机相关条件的定义可很好地预测儿童和成人的结局,并且适合自动化监测。基于研究结果,我们建议考虑将呼吸机相关性事件的监测重点从仅肺炎转移到更广泛的并发症。