Highlights
Noninvasive
ventilation reduces the risk of intubation in subgroups of acute
hypoxemic patients.
Immunosuppressed, acute pulmonary edema and pneumonia patients may
benefit most from NIV.
Well designed
randomized clinical trials are required to address the benefit in
other populations.
Abstract
Purpose
Evaluate current
recommendation for the use of noninvasive ventilation (Bi-level
positive airway pressure- BiPAP modality) in hypoxemic acute
respiratory failure, excluding chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Methods
Electronic searches
in MEDLINE, Web of Science, Clinical Trials, and The Cochrane Central
Register of Controlled Clinical Trials. We searched for randomized
controlled trials comparing BiPAP to a control group in patients with
hypoxemic acute respiratory failure. Endotracheal intubation and
death were the assessed outcomes.
Results
Of the 563 studies
found, nine met the inclusion criteria for this systematic review.
The pooled RR (95% CI) for intubation in patients with acute
pulmonary edema (APE)/community acquired pneumonia (CAP) and in
immunosuppressed patients (cancer and transplants) were 0.61
(0.39–0.84) and 0.77 (0.60–0.93), respectively. For Intensive
Care Units (ICU) mortality, the RR (95% CI) in patients with APE/CAP
was 0.51 (0.22–0.79). The heterogeneity was low in all comparisons.
Conclusions
NIV showed a
significant protective effect for intubation in immunosuppressed
patients (cancer and transplants) and in patients with APE/CAP.
However, the benefits of NIV for other etiologies are not clear and
more trials are needed to prove these effects.
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