학술논문

Clinical Epidemiology of Extubation Failure in the Pediatric Cardiac ICU
Document Type
article
Source
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine. 16(9)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Rare Diseases
Clinical Research
Bioengineering
Pediatric
Assistive Technology
Patient Safety
Cardiovascular
Heart Disease
8.1 Organisation and delivery of services
Health and social care services research
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Airway Extubation
Cardiac Surgical Procedures
Child
Child
Preschool
Coronary Care Units
Female
Hospital Mortality
Humans
Infant
Infant
Newborn
Intensive Care Units
Pediatric
Intubation
Intratracheal
Length of Stay
Male
Respiration
Artificial
Retrospective Studies
Risk Factors
Time Factors
Treatment Failure
Ventilator Weaning
Young Adult
cardiac
cardiac surgery
extubation failure
mechanical ventilation
Nursing
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Pediatrics
Clinical sciences
Paediatrics
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveTo describe the clinical epidemiology of extubation failure in a multicenter cohort of patients treated in pediatric cardiac ICUs.DesignRetrospective cohort study using prospectively collected clinical registry data.SettingPediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium registry.PatientsAll patients admitted to the CICU at Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium hospitals.InterventionsNone.Measurements and main resultsAnalysis of all mechanical ventilation episodes in the registry from October 1, 2013, to July 31, 2014. The primary outcome of extubation failure was reintubation less than 48 hours after planned extubation. Repeated-measures analysis using generalized estimating equations to account for within patient and center correlation was performed to identify risk factors for extubation failure. Adjusted extubation failure rates for each hospital were calculated using logistic regression controlling for patient factors. Of 1,734 mechanical ventilation episodes (1,478 patients at eight hospitals) ending in a planned extubation, there were 100 extubation failures (5.8%). In multivariable analysis, only longer duration of mechanical ventilation was significantly associated with extubation failure (p = 0.01); the failure rate was 4% when ventilated less than 24 hours, 9% after 24 hours, and 13% after 7 days. For 503 patients intubated and extubated in the cardiac operating room, 15 patients (3%) failed extubation within 48 hours (12 within 24 hr). Case-mix-adjusted extubation failure rates ranged from 1.1% to 9.8% across hospitals. Patients failing extubation had greater median cardiac ICU length of stay (15 vs 3 d; p < 0.001) and in-hospital mortality (7.9 vs 1.2%; p < 0.001).ConclusionsThough extubation failure is uncommon overall, there may be opportunities to improve extubation readiness assessment in patients ventilated more than 24 hours. These data suggest that extubation in the operating room after cardiac surgery can be done with a low failure rate. We observed variation in extubation failure rates across hospitals, and future investigation must elucidate the optimal strategies of high-performing centers to reduce ventilation time while limiting extubation failures.