Biney Isaac N, Ari Arzu, Barjaktarevic Igor Z, Carlin Brian, Christiani David C, Cochran Lauren, Drummond M Bradley, Johnson Karmon, Kealing Dan, Kuehl Philip J, Li Jie, Mahler Donald A, Martinez Sergio, Ohar Jill, Radonovich Lewis J, Sood Akshay, Suggett Jason, Tal-Singer Ruth, Tashkin Donald, Yates Julie, Cambridge Lisa, Dailey Patricia A, Mannino David M, Dhand Rajiv
University Pulmonary and Critical Care, The University of Tennessee Graduate School of Medicine, Knoxville, TN.
Department of Respiratory Care and Texas State Sleep Center, Texas State University, Round Rock, TX.
Chest. 2024 Mar;165(3):653-668. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2023.11.013. Epub 2023 Nov 15.
Nebulizers are used commonly for inhaled drug delivery. Because they deliver medication through aerosol generation, clarification is needed on what constitutes safe aerosol delivery in infectious respiratory disease settings. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of understanding the safety and potential risks of aerosol-generating procedures. However, evidence supporting the increased risk of disease transmission with nebulized treatments is inconclusive, and inconsistent guidelines and differing opinions have left uncertainty regarding their use. Many clinicians opt for alternative devices, but this practice could impact outcomes negatively, especially for patients who may not derive full treatment benefit from handheld inhalers. Therefore, it is prudent to develop strategies that can be used during nebulized treatment to minimize the emission of fugitive aerosols, these comprising bioaerosols exhaled by infected individuals and medical aerosols generated by the device that also may be contaminated. This is particularly relevant for patient care in the context of a highly transmissible virus.
How can potential risks of infections during nebulization be mitigated?
The COPD Foundation Nebulizer Consortium (CNC) was formed in 2020 to address uncertainties surrounding administration of nebulized medication. The CNC is an international, multidisciplinary collaboration of patient advocates, pulmonary physicians, critical care physicians, respiratory therapists, clinical scientists, and pharmacists from research centers, medical centers, professional societies, industry, and government agencies. The CNC developed this expert guidance to inform the safe use of nebulized therapies for patients and providers and to answer key questions surrounding medication delivery with nebulizers during pandemics or when exposure to common respiratory pathogens is anticipated.
CNC members reviewed literature and guidelines regarding nebulization and developed two sets of guidance statements: one for the health care setting and one for the home environment.
Future studies need to explore the risk of disease transmission with fugitive aerosols associated with different nebulizer types in real patient care situations and to evaluate the effectiveness of mitigation strategies.
雾化器常用于吸入药物递送。由于它们通过产生气溶胶来递送药物,因此在传染性呼吸道疾病环境中,需要明确什么构成安全的气溶胶递送。2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行凸显了了解气溶胶生成程序的安全性和潜在风险的重要性。然而,支持雾化治疗增加疾病传播风险的证据尚无定论,不一致的指南和不同的观点使得其使用存在不确定性。许多临床医生选择替代设备,但这种做法可能会对治疗结果产生负面影响,尤其是对于那些可能无法从手持吸入器中获得充分治疗益处的患者。因此,制定在雾化治疗期间可用于尽量减少逃逸气溶胶排放的策略是明智的,这些气溶胶包括受感染个体呼出的生物气溶胶以及设备产生的也可能被污染的医用气溶胶。这在高传播性病毒背景下的患者护理中尤为重要。
如何减轻雾化过程中感染的潜在风险?
慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)基金会雾化器联盟(CNC)于2020年成立,以解决围绕雾化药物给药的不确定性。CNC是一个由患者倡导者、肺病医生、重症监护医生、呼吸治疗师、临床科学家以及来自研究中心、医疗中心、专业协会、行业和政府机构的药剂师组成的国际多学科合作组织。CNC制定了本专家指南,以指导患者和医护人员安全使用雾化疗法,并回答在大流行期间或预期接触常见呼吸道病原体时围绕雾化器药物递送的关键问题。
CNC成员回顾了关于雾化的文献和指南,并制定了两套指导声明:一套针对医疗环境,一套针对家庭环境。
未来的研究需要在实际患者护理情况下探索与不同类型雾化器相关的逃逸气溶胶导致疾病传播的风险,并评估缓解策略的有效性。