• Ann Am Thorac Soc · Apr 2018

    Comparative Study

    International Practice Variation in Weaning Critically Ill Adults from Invasive Mechanical Ventilation.

    • Burns Karen E A KEA 1 Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada., Stavroula Raptis, Rosane Nisenbaum, Leena Rizvi, Andrew Jones, Jyoti Bakshi, Wylie Tan, Aleksander Meret, Deborah J Cook, Francois Lellouche, Scott K Epstein, David Gattas, Farhad N Kapadia, Jesús Villar, Laurent Brochard, Martin R Lessard, and Maureen O Meade.
    • 1 Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
    • Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2018 Apr 1; 15 (4): 494-502.

    RationaleRandomized trials and meta-analyses have informed several aspects of weaning. Results are rarely replicated in practice, as evidence is applied in intensive care units that differ from the settings in which it was generated.ObjectivesWe aimed to: 1) describe weaning practice variation (identifying weaning candidates, conducting spontaneous breathing trials, using ventilator modes, and other aspects of care during weaning); 2) characterize regional differences in weaning practices; and 3) identify factors associated with practice variation.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional, self-administered, international postal survey of adult intensivist members of regional critical care societies from six geographic regions, including Canada, India, the United Kingdom, Europe, Australia/New Zealand, and the United States. We worked with societies to randomly select potential respondents from membership lists and administer questionnaires with the goal of obtaining 200 responses per region.ResultsWe analyzed 1,144 questionnaires (Canada, 156; India, 136; United Kingdom, 219; Europe, 260; Australia/New Zealand, 196; United States, 177). Across regions, most respondents screened patients once daily to identify spontaneous breathing trials candidates (regional range, 70.0%-95.6%) and less often screened twice daily (range, 12.2%-33.1%) or more than twice daily (range, 1.6%-18.2%). To wean patients, most respondents used pressure support alone (range, 31.0%-71.7%) or with spontaneous breathing trials (range, 35.7%-68.1%). To conduct spontaneous breathing trials, respondents predominantly used pressure support with positive end-expiratory pressure (range, 56.5%-72.3%) and T-piece (8.9%-59.5%). Across regions, we found important variation in screening frequency, spontaneous breathing trials techniques; ventilator modes, written directives to guide care, noninvasive ventilation; and the roles played by available personnel in various aspects of weaning.ConclusionsOur findings document the presence and extent of practice variation in ventilator weaning on an international scale, and highlight the multidisciplinary and collaborative nature of weaning.

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