Critical Care 29, Article number: 11(2025)
Published: 07 January 2025
Background
Predicting complete liberation from mechanical ventilation
(MV) is still challenging. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) offers a
non-invasive measure of regional ventilation distribution and could bring
additional information.
Research question.
Whether the display of regional ventilation distribution
during a Spontaneous Breathing Trial (SBT) could help at predicting early and
successful liberation from MV.
Study design and methods
Patients were monitored with EIT during the SBT. The tidal
image was divided into ventral and dorsal regions and displayed simultaneously.
We explored the ventral-to-dorsal ventilation difference in percentage, and its
association with clinical outcomes. Liberation success was defined
pragmatically as passing SBT followed by extubation within 24 h without
reintubation for 7 days. Failure included use of rescue therapy,
reintubation within 7 days, tracheostomy, and not being extubated within
24 h after succesful SBT. A training cohort was used for discovery,
followed by a validation cohort.
Results
Among a total of 98 patients analyzed, 85 passed SBT (87%),
but rapid liberation success occurred only in 40; 13.5% of extubated patients
required reintubation. From the first minutes to the entire SBT duration, the
absolute ventral-to-dorsal difference was consistently smaller in liberation
success compared to all subgroups of failure (p < 0.0001).
An absolute difference at 5 min of SBT > 20% was associated with failure of liberation, with
sensitivity and specificity of 71% and 78% and positive predictive value 81% in
a validation cohort.
Conclusion
During SBT, a large ventral-to-dorsal difference in
ventilation indicated by EIT may help to rapidly identify patients at risk of
liberation failure.
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