McNamee James J, Agus Ashley, Boyle Andrew J, Jackson Colette, McDowell Cliona, Haglund Jeanette, McAuley Danny F
Regional Intensive Care Unit, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast, UK.
Centre for Experimental Medicine, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences, Wellcome-Wolfson Institute for Experimental Medicine, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2025 Jul;29(33):1-16. doi: 10.3310/GJDM0320.
In patients who require mechanical ventilation for acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure, further reduction in tidal volumes, compared with conventional low tidal volume ventilation, may improve outcomes.
To determine whether using extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal improves outcomes in patients with acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure and is cost-effective.
A multicentre, randomised, allocation-concealed, open-label, pragmatic clinical trial.
Fifty-one intensive care units across the United Kingdom.
Four hundred and twelve adult patients receiving mechanical ventilation for acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure, of a planned sample size of 1120.
Lower tidal volume ventilation facilitated by extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal for at least 48 hours ( = 202) or standard care with conventional low tidal volume ventilation ( = 210).
All-cause mortality 90 days. Secondary outcomes included ventilator-free days; adverse events; extracorporeal membrane oxygenation use; long-term mortality; health-related quality of life; health service costs; long-term respiratory morbidity.
The trial was stopped early because of futility and feasibility. The 90-day mortality rate was 41.5% in the extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal group versus 39.5% in the standard care group (risk ratio 1.05, 95% confidence interval 0.83 to 1.33; difference 2.0%, 95% confidence interval - 7.6% to 11.5%; = 0.68). There were significantly fewer mean ventilator-free days in the extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal group compared with the standard care group (7.1, 95% confidence interval 5.9 to 8.3) versus (9.2, 95% confidence interval 7.9 to 10.4) days; mean difference, -2.1 (95% confidence interval -3.8 to -0.3; = 0.02). Serious adverse events were reported for 62 patients (31%) in extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal group and 18 (9%) in the standard care group, including intracranial haemorrhage in 9 patients (4.5%) versus 0 (0%) and bleeding at other sites in 6 (3.0%) versus 1 (0.5%) in the extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal group versus the control group. Two-year mortality data were available for 95% of patients. There was no difference in the time to death between groups (hazard ratio 1.08, 95% confidence interval 0.81 to 1.44; log-rank test = 0.61). There was no difference in long-term outcomes between groups. There was no difference in quality-adjusted life-years at 12 months (mean difference -0.01, 95% confidence interval -0.06 to 0.05). Total 12-month costs were statistically significantly higher in the extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal group (mean difference £7668.76, 95% confidence interval £159.75 to £15,177.77). Secondary analyses indicated there may be heterogeneity of treatment effect based on physiological characteristics of the patients. A systematic review supported these findings.
Only 6% of screened patients were included in the study; most sites were naive to the intervention before the study commenced; other aspects of care were not standardised in each group, because this was a pragmatic trial; the trial may have been underpowered to detect a clinically important difference, because the trial was stopped early; blinding to the clinicians or patients was not possible.
There were no short- or long-term benefits found, and the device was associated with higher cost and potentially significant complications. We would advise against using this device in addition to standard care for the treatment of patients with hypoxaemic respiratory failure, outside of future clinical trials.
Future studies could further explore whether different patient populations receiving a larger 'dose' of from extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal might benefit, use core outcome sets and collect broader long-term outcomes and consider measuring patients' health-related quality of life at the soonest opportunity after regaining capacity.
This synopsis presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme as award number 13/143/02.
在因急性低氧性呼吸衰竭而需要机械通气的患者中,与传统低潮气量通气相比,进一步降低潮气量可能改善预后。
确定使用体外二氧化碳清除技术是否能改善急性低氧性呼吸衰竭患者的预后,以及是否具有成本效益。
一项多中心、随机、分配隐藏、开放标签的实用性临床试验。
英国的51个重症监护病房。
412例因急性低氧性呼吸衰竭接受机械通气的成年患者,计划样本量为1120例。
通过体外二氧化碳清除技术进行至少48小时的低潮气量通气(n = 202)或采用传统低潮气量通气的标准治疗(n = 210)。
90天全因死亡率。次要结局包括无呼吸机天数;不良事件;体外膜肺氧合的使用;长期死亡率;健康相关生活质量;卫生服务成本;长期呼吸系统发病率。
由于无效和可行性问题,试验提前终止。体外二氧化碳清除组的90天死亡率为41.5%,标准治疗组为39.5%(风险比1.05,95%置信区间0.83至1.33;差异2.0%,95%置信区间 -7.6%至11.5%;P = 0.68)。与标准治疗组相比,体外二氧化碳清除组的平均无呼吸机天数显著减少(7.1天,95%置信区间5.9至8.3天),而标准治疗组为(9.2天,95%置信区间7.9至10.4天);平均差异为 -2.1(95%置信区间 -3.8至 -0.3;P = 0.02)。体外二氧化碳清除组有62例患者(31%)报告了严重不良事件,标准治疗组有18例(9%),包括体外二氧化碳清除组9例患者(4.5%)发生颅内出血,而对照组为0例(0%),体外二氧化碳清除组6例(3.0%)在其他部位出血,对照组为1例(0.5%)。95%的患者有两年死亡率数据。两组之间的死亡时间无差异(风险比1.08,95%置信区间0.81至1.44;对数秩检验P = 0.61)。两组之间的长期结局无差异。12个月时的质量调整生命年无差异(平均差异 -0.01,95%置信区间 -0.06至0.05)。体外二氧化碳清除组12个月的总成本在统计学上显著更高(平均差异7668.76英镑,95%置信区间159.75英镑至15177.77英镑)。二次分析表明,根据患者的生理特征,治疗效果可能存在异质性。一项系统评价支持了这些发现。
纳入研究的患者仅占筛查患者的6%;大多数研究地点在研究开始前对该干预措施并不熟悉;由于这是一项实用性试验,每组的其他护理方面未进行标准化;由于试验提前终止,该试验可能没有足够的能力检测出临床上的重要差异;不可能对临床医生或患者进行盲法。
未发现短期或长期益处,且该设备与更高的成本和潜在的严重并发症相关。除未来临床试验外,我们建议在治疗低氧性呼吸衰竭患者时,不建议在标准治疗基础上使用该设备。
未来的研究可以进一步探索不同患者群体接受更大“剂量”的体外二氧化碳清除技术是否可能获益,使用核心结局指标集并收集更广泛的长期结局,以及考虑在患者恢复能力后尽快测量其健康相关生活质量。
本摘要介绍了由英国国家卫生与保健研究机构(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划资助的独立研究,资助编号为13/143/02。