This review aims to: (1) describe the rationale of pleural (P) and transpulmonary (P) pressure measurements in children during mechanical ventilation (MV); (2) discuss its usefulness and limitations as a guide for protective MV; (3) propose future directions for paediatric research. We conducted a scoping review on P in critically ill children using PubMed and Embase search engines. We included peer-reviewed studies using oesophageal (P) and P measurements in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) published until September 2021, and excluded studies in neonates and patients treated with non-invasive ventilation. P corresponds to the difference between airway pressure and P Oesophageal manometry allows measurement of P, a good surrogate of P, to estimate P directly at the bedside. Lung stress is the P, while strain corresponds to the lung deformation induced by the changing volume during insufflation. Lung stress and strain are the main determinants of MV-related injuries with P and P being key components. P-targeted therapies allow tailoring of MV: (1) Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) titration based on end-expiratory P (direct measurement) may be used to avoid lung collapse in the lung surrounding the oesophagus. The clinical benefit of such strategy has not been demonstrated yet. This approach should consider the degree of recruitable lung, and may be limited to patients in which PEEP is set to achieve an end-expiratory P value close to zero; (2) Protective ventilation based on end-inspiratory P (derived from the ratio of lung and respiratory system elastances), might be used to limit overdistention and volutrauma by targeting lung stress values < 20-25 cmHO; (3) P may be set to target a physiological respiratory effort in order to avoid both self-induced lung injury and ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction; (4) P or P measurements may contribute to a better understanding of cardiopulmonary interactions. The growing cardiorespiratory system makes children theoretically more susceptible to atelectrauma, myotrauma and right ventricle failure. In children with acute respiratory distress, P and P measurements may help to characterise how changes in PEEP affect P and potentially haemodynamics. In the PICU, P measurement to estimate respiratory effort is useful during weaning and ventilator liberation. Finally, the use of P tracings may improve the detection of patient ventilator asynchronies, which are frequent in children. Despite these numerous theoritcal benefits in children, P measurement is rarely performed in routine paediatric practice. While the lack of robust clincal data partially explains this observation, important limitations of the existing methods to estimate P in children, such as their invasiveness and technical limitations, associated with the lack of reference values for lung and chest wall elastances may also play a role. P and P monitoring have numerous potential clinical applications in the PICU to tailor protective MV, but its usefulness is counterbalanced by technical limitations. Paediatric evidence seems currently too weak to consider oesophageal manometry as a routine respiratory monitoring. The development and validation of a noninvasive estimation of P and multimodal respiratory monitoring may be worth to be evaluated in the future.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/thorax-2021-218538DOI Listing

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