Use of rescue noninvasive ventilation for post-extubation
respiratory failure
Critical Care volume 29,
Article number: 470 (2025) Published: 04 November 2025
Background
Robust evidence
supports the use of preemptive non-invasive ventilation (NIV) after extubation
in selected high-risk patient cohorts. In contrast, current guidelines
discourage the use of NIV as a rescue therapy for respiratory failure that
develops later after extubation, based on earlier studies indicating a
potential increase in hospital mortality due to delayed reintubation.
Nonetheless, NIV continues to be employed in this setting. We conducted a
post-hoc analysis of a randomized trial to assess the clinical outcomes of
rescue NIV for post-extubation respiratory failure.
Methods
In this post-hoc
analysis of a randomized trial comparing high-flow with Venturi mask oxygen in
hypoxemic patients after extubation, we included those who developed
post-extubation respiratory failure according to prespecified criteria;
patients who received rescue NIV per physician’s decision were compared to
those who received direct re-intubation. Criteria for re-intubation during NIV
were prespecified. Odds ratio after inverse probability of treatment weighting
and posterior probabilities by Bayesian regression are reported.
Results
Among 494 extubated
patients, 147 developed respiratory failure while receiving oxygen therapy,
occurring at a median of 37 h [IQR 13–85] after extubation: 83 (57%) were
treated with rescue NIV and 64 (43%) received immediate re-intubation. The rate
of NIV failure was 58%, without differences between patients with hypoxemic
respiratory failure and those with hypercapnia and/or respiratory distress (60%
vs. 56%, p = 0.82). In the weighted cohort, the use of
rescue NIV, compared to direct re-intubation, was associated with lower
intensive care unit mortality (adjusted odds ratio = 0.31
[95%CI: 0.12–0.82], p = 0.019) and similar
hospital mortality (adjusted odds ratio = 1.01 [95%CI: 0.43–2.33], p = 0.99). The posterior probability that NIV
reduced intensive care unit mortality was > 90% across all priors. The posterior
probability that NIV did not increase hospital mortality was 44% under a
noninformative prior, 47% under a skeptical prior, and 39% under a pessimistic
prior.
Conclusion
Rescue NIV for
post-extubation respiratory failure is associated with high failure rates;
however, when applied with well-defined criteria for reintubation, it does not
appear to be clearly associated with increases in hospital mortality. A
randomized trial to re-evaluate the efficacy of rescue NIV for post-extubation
respiratory failure is warranted.
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