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Best practice peri-extubation bundle reduces neonatal and infant extubation failure after cardiac surgery.

Authors :
Todd Tzanetos D
Bassi H
Furlong-Dillard J
Mastropietro C
Olive M
Klugman D
Werho D
Source :
Cardiology in the young [Cardiol Young] 2024 Dec 19, pp. 1-6. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Dec 19.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Introduction: Extubation failure after neonatal cardiac surgery is associated with increased intensive care unit length of stay, morbidity, and mortality. We performed a quality improvement project to create and implement a peri-extubation bundle, including extubation readiness testing, spontaneous breathing trial, and high-risk criteria identification, using best practices at high-performing centers to decrease neonatal and infant extubation failure by 20% from a baseline of 15.7% to 12.6% over a 2-year period.<br />Methods: Utilising the transparency of the Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium database, five centres were identified as high performers, having better-than-expected neonatal extubation success rates with the balancing metric of as-expected or better-than-expected mechanical ventilation duration. Structured interviews were conducted with cardiac intensive care unit physician leadership at the identified centers to determine centre-specific extubation practices. Data from those interviews underwent qualitative content analysis which was used to develop a peri-extubation bundle. The bundle was implemented at a single-centre 17-bed cardiac intensive care unit. Extubation failure, defined as reintubation within 48 hours of extubation for anything other than a procedure, ventilator days and bundle compliance was tracked.<br />Results: There was a 41.4% decrease in extubation failure following bundle implementation (12 failures of 76 extubations pre-implantation; 6 failures of 65 extubations post-implementation). Bundle compliance was 95.4%. There was no difference in ventilator days ( p = 0.079) between groups.<br />Conclusion: Implementation of a peri-extubation bundle created from best practices at high-performing centres reduced extubation failure by 41.4% in neonates and infants undergoing congenital heart surgery.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1467-1107
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cardiology in the young
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39697102
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1047951124036151