Improved survival following ward-based non-invasive pressure support for severe hypoxia in a cohort of frail patients with COVID-19: retrospective analysis from a UK teaching hospital
Título
Improved survival following ward-based non-invasive pressure support for severe hypoxia in a cohort of frail patients with COVID-19: retrospective analysis from a UK teaching hospital
Autor
Wendy Funston, Sarah Wiscombe, Graham P Burns, Nicholas D Lane, Hilary M Tedd, Elizabeth Deutsch, Florence Douglas, Sophie D West, Jim G Macfarlane
Descripción
Since the outbreak of COVID-19 in China in December 2019, a pandemic has rapidly developed on a scale that has overwhelmed health services in a number of countries. COVID-19 has the potential to lead to severe hypoxia; this is usually the cause of death if it occurs. In a substantial number of patients, adequate arterial oxygenation cannot be achieved with supplementary oxygen therapy alone. To date, there has been no clear guideline endorsement of ward-based non-invasive pressure support (NIPS) for severely hypoxic patients who are deemed unlikely to benefit from invasive ventilation. We established a ward-based NIPS service for COVID-19 PCR-positive patients, with severe hypoxia, and in whom escalation to critical care for invasive ventilation was not deemed appropriate. A retrospective analysis of survival in these patients was undertaken. Twenty-eight patients were included. Ward-based NIPS for severe hypoxia was associated with a 50% survival in this cohort. This compares favourably with Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre survival data following invasive ventilation in a less frail, less comorbid and younger population. These results suggest that ward-based NIPS should be considered as a treatment option in an integrated escalation strategy in all units managing respiratory failure secondary to COVID-19.
Fecha
2020
Identificador
10.1136/bmjresp-2020-000621
Fuente
Epidemiology and Health
Editor
Korean Society of Epidemiology
Cobertura
Medicine, Diseases of the respiratory system
Colección
Citación
Wendy Funston, Sarah Wiscombe, Graham P Burns, Nicholas D Lane, Hilary M Tedd, Elizabeth Deutsch, Florence Douglas, Sophie D West, Jim G Macfarlane, “Improved survival following ward-based non-invasive pressure support for severe hypoxia in a cohort of frail patients with COVID-19: retrospective analysis from a UK teaching hospital,” SOCICT Open, consulta 17 de abril de 2026, https://www.socictopen.socict.org/items/show/7214.
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