Design: Prospective,
observational, pragmatic study.
Setting: Ordinary
wards of a teaching hospital.
Patients:
Consecutive patients treated with noninvasive ventilation for acute
respiratory failure.
Interventions: None.
Measurements and
Main Results: Two-hundred and twenty-patients were enrolled.
Mortality rates at 30-day, 90-days, and 1-year follow-up were 20%,
26%, and 34%. When excluding patients with “do-not-resuscitate”
status, mortality rates were 13%, 19%, and 28%. The multivariate
analyses identified solid cancer, pneumonia in hematologic patients,
and do-not-resuscitate status as independent predictors of mortality
with postoperative acute respiratory failure associated with improved
survival. The same predictors were confirmed when excluding
do-not-resuscitate patients from the analyses.
Conclusions:
Noninvasive ventilation applied in ordinary wards was effective, with
long-term outcomes not different from those reported for ICU
settings. Solid cancer, pneumonia in hematologic malignancies, and
do-not-resuscitate status predicted mortality, whereas patients with
postoperative acute respiratory failure had the best survival rate.
Additional studies are required to evaluate noninvasive ventilation
efficacy in the wards compared with ICU.
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