Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Newborn Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Position on the Spontaneous Breathing Trial
Mechanical ventilation is a life-sustaining intervention in premature infants with
respiratory difficulties. There is relative consensus when to intubate and provide positive
pressure mechanical ventilation in the presence of respiratory failure. In contrast,
discontinuation of mechanical ventilation during recovery remains largely subjective. A
potential predictive tool for neonatal extubation is the Spontaneous Breathing Trial (SBT).
The efficacy of SBT or other tests used in older patient populations in improving clinical
judgment is questionable in the neonatal population with its unique physiology, respiratory
mechanics and drive factors. Christiana Care Health System NICU currently uses the SBT as a
standard part of neonatal assessment for extubation from mechanical ventilation.
Infants in the CCHS NICU are routinely cared for in multiple positions (prone, supine,
lateral) throughout the day. What is unknown is the impact of infant positioning on the SBT.
An SBT performed in one position may not predict infant respiratory status after extubation
in another position. Understanding the impact of infant positioning and work of breathing
indices independently or in combination with an SBT will aid clinicians in decision-making
and potentially decrease neonatal morbidity (inaccuracy with timing and safety of
extubation). This pilot study will begin to explore these clinically relevant factors.
Objectives: This pilot study will investigate the (1) role of infant position on SBT score
and (2) the relationship of work of breathing indices in reference to the SBT score and
infant position.
Mechanical ventilation is a life-sustaining intervention in premature infants with
respiratory difficulties. There is relative consensus when to intubate and provide positive
pressure mechanical ventilation in the presence of respiratory failure. In contrast,
discontinuation of mechanical ventilation during recovery remains largely subjective.
Typically 25% of infants weighing <1500g who are extubated using these criteria require
reintubation suggesting that the ability of clinicians to predict successful extubation is
limited. A potential predictive tool for neonatal extubation is the Spontaneous Breathing
Trial (SBT). The efficacy of SBT or other tests used in older patient populations in
improving clinical judgment is questionable in the neonatal population with its unique
physiology, respiratory mechanics and drive factors.
Christiana Care Health System NICU currently uses the SBT as a standard part of neonatal
assessment for extubation from mechanical ventilation.
The SBT used at CCHS is a non-invasive 5-minute test performed on an intubated infant.
Respiratory rates (RR), expired tidal volume (Vte), heart rate, and oxygen saturation by
pulse oximetry (SpO2) are recorded. An SBT is considered passed, when there is no apnea
(defined as no respiratory effort for greater than 20 seconds), no bradycardia (defined as
heart rate less than 100 for greater than 15 seconds), and the SpO2 has been maintained at
greater than 85% or SBT VE greater than 60% than that of the mechanical VE.
Potentially confounding the SBT, and unstudied, is the effect of position (prone, supine,
lateral). Similar to adults, infant position has a significant effect on the efficacy of
spontaneous breathing. Infants in the CCHS NICU are routinely cared for in multiple positions
(prone, supine, lateral) throughout the day. What is unknown is the impact of infant
positioning on the SBT. An SBT performed in one position may not predict infant respiratory
status after extubation in another position. Understanding the impact of infant positioning
and work of breathing indices independently or in combination with an SBT will aid clinicians
in decision-making and potentially decrease neonatal morbidity (inaccuracy with timing and
safety of extubation). This pilot study will begin to explore these clinically relevant
factors.
Work of breathing (WOB) indices can be non-invasively measured utilizing respiratory
inductive plethysmography (RIP). WOB indices measured by RIP have been utilized by this
research team for clinical and research purposes, including at CCHS. RIP entails that an
infant breathe calmly while wearing soft elastic cloth bands that comfortably encircle the
rib cage and abdomen. Contained within the bands is a flexible sinusoidal wire that measures
motion. Measurements are taken for a minimum of 10 breaths, but preferable throughout the
duration of the 5 minutes SBT.
Objectives: This pilot study will investigate the (1) role of infant position on SBT score
and (2) the relationship of work of breathing indices in reference to the SBT score and
infant position.
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