Utilization and effect of neuromuscular blockade in a randomized trial of high-frequency oscillation.

J Crit Care

Department of Critical Care Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine and Institute for Health Policy, Management & Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.

Published: December 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the use of neuromuscular blockade (NMB) in patients on high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) and its association with mortality rates.
  • NMB was given to 376 out of 548 patients, who showed poorer lung function and higher hospital mortality compared to those who did not receive NMB.
  • Despite these findings, NMB use itself did not contribute to the higher mortality associated with HFOV treatments.

Article Abstract

Purpose: We evaluated characteristics associated with neuromuscular blockade (NMB) use, center-level variation, and whether NMB mediated excess mortality among patients assigned to high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) in the OSCILLATE trial.

Materials And Methods: NMB exposure was defined as receipt after randomization; the primary outcome was hospital mortality. Descriptive analyses compared NMB-exposed vs unexposed patients. Multivariable analyses included patients not on baseline NMB. Cox regression evaluated associations of patient- and center-level variables with NMB use. A log-normal frailty model evaluated center effects. Mediation analysis examined the effect of NMB in HFOV-assigned patients.

Results: 376/548 patients (39 centers) received post-randomization NMB, of whom 165 received baseline NMB. Patients receiving post-randomization NMB (vs. not) had worse lung mechanics and gas exchange, received more sedation and vasopressors (p < 0.05), and had higher hospital mortality (44% vs. 34%, p = 0.03). Mean airway pressure ≥ 24 cmHO, randomization to HFOV, and intensive care unit size ≥ 31 beds were associated with post-randomization NMB. After adjustment, center had a negligible effect on post-randomization NMB (median hazard ratio 1.01, p = 0.047). NMB use did not mediate excess mortality among HFOV-allocated patients (p = 0.80).

Conclusions: In OSCILLATE, receipt of post-randomization NMB was associated with worse outcomes, but NMB use did not mediate HFOV-associated higher mortality.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcrc.2021.08.006DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

nmb
9
neuromuscular blockade
8
baseline nmb
8
post-randomization nmb
8
patients
5
utilization neuromuscular
4
blockade randomized
4
randomized trial
4
trial high-frequency
4
high-frequency oscillation
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!