Background: Pediatric extubation failure is associated with morbidity and mortality. The most common cause is upper-airway obstruction. Subglottic edema is common, but upper-airway obstruction can occur from the oral cavity to the trachea. Dichotomous categorization of extubation failure as airway versus non-airway may help identify risk factors as well as strategies that translate to lower extubation failure rates.

Methods: This was as single-center, retrospective cohort study of invasive mechanical ventilation encounters within a quality improvement database between October 1, 2017-November 30, 2020. Utilizing a 3-physician adjudication process, all extubation failures were categorized as airway versus non-airway. Primary outcome was failure subtype prevalence. Secondary outcome was failure subtype risk factors. Clinical outcomes were explored.

Results: The all-cause extubation failure rate was 10% in a cohort of 844 encounters. Airway and non-airway extubation failure represented 60.7% and 39.3%, respectively. Most airway failures were due to upper-airway obstruction (84.3%)-35.3% were supraglottic, 25.5% subglottic, and 23.5% mixed. Other causes of airway failure were airway patency/secretions (11.8%) and aspiration (3.9%). Non-airway failures were attributed to respiratory failure (75.8%), encephalopathy (15.2%), and other (9%). All-cause extubation failure was associated with dysgenetic/syndromic comorbidity ( = .005), ≥ 3 concurrent comorbid conditions ( = .007), indication for invasive ventilation ( < .001), and longer invasive mechanical ventilation duration ( < .001). Airway extubation failure was significantly associated with the presence of a respiratory comorbidity ( = .01) and Glasgow coma scale < 10 ( = .02). No significant non-airway failure risk factors were identified. Longer pediatric ICU (PICU) stay ( < .001) and PICU mortality ( < .001) were associated with all-cause extubation failure. No significant outcome associations with extubation failure subtype were identified.

Conclusions: Airway extubation failure prevalence was 1.5 times higher than non-airway failure. Potential risk factors for airway failure were identified. These findings are hypothesis generating for future study focused on key evidence gaps and pragmatic bedside application.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10027148PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4187/respcare.10341DOI Listing

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