Ventilation-associated Pneumonia Clinical Trial
Ventilation-associated pneumonia is the main site of healthcare-associated infections in the
severe trauma patient, with a mean incidence rate of 35%. Ventilator-associated pneumonia
increases morbi-mortality, length of stay in intensive care and overall management costs. As
was recalled by the jury of the 2008 SFAR-SRLF consensus conference on the prevention of
nosocomial infections contracted in intensive care, success in this preventive endeavour
depends on a number of measures: orotracheal intubation route, maintaining tube cuff pressure
between 25 and 30 cm H2O, maintaining a semi-seated position ≥30°, nasal and oropharyngeal
care at regular intervals, striving to avoid unscheduled extubation, and use of a written
sedation-analgesia algorithm allowing for early weaning from ventilation.
Devices ensuring continuous pneumatic control of tube cuff pressure are more efficient in
maintaining tracheal balloon pressure than intermittent adjustments using a hand-held
manometer. In one study, these devices clearly facilitated diminution of microaspiration of
gastric contents and of ventilator-associated pneumonia incidence density (9.7 vs. 22
VAP/1000 days of mechanical ventilation; p = 0.005).
The investigators are putting forward the hypothesis that by adjoining a device providing
continuous pneumatic regulation of tube cuff pressure to an overall strategy aimed at
ventilator-associated pneumonia prevention (including semi-recumbent position ≥30°,
oro-nasal-pharyngeal care at regular intervals and reduced risk exposure) can decrease VAP
incidence by 50% in severely traumatised patients whose condition necessitates mechanical
ventilation of an expected duration exceeding 48h.
Ours is the first large-scale study to evaluate the interest of an innovative technology
bundle on decrease of ventilator-associated pneumonia incidence in one of the intensive care
populations the most at risk, namely severe trauma patients, a population presently
benefiting from the other recommended preventive measures.
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Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
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Completed |
NCT01137487 -
Study of Impact of Not Measuring Residual Gastric Volume on Nosocomial Pneumonia Rates
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N/A |