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Intubation rate of patients with hypoxia due to COVID-19 treated with awake proning: A meta-analysis

Authors :
Quincy K. Tran
Jessica Downing
Reem Alfalasi
Mehboob Rehan
Isha Yardi
Stephanie Cardona
David Milzman
Bradford Schwartz
Fariba Yazdanpanah
Vera Bzhilyanskaya
Source :
The American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Awake prone positioning (PP), or proning, is used to avoid intubations in hypoxic patients with COVID-19, but because of the disease's novelty and constant evolution of treatment strategies, the efficacy of awake PP is unclear. We conducted a meta-analysis of the literature to assess the intubation rate among patients with COVID-19 requiring oxygen or noninvasive ventilatory support who underwent awake PP. Methods We searched PubMed, Embase, and Scopus databases through August 15, 2020 to identify relevant randomized control trials, observational studies, and case series. We performed random-effects meta-analyses for the primary outcome of intubation rate. We used moderator analysis and meta-regressions to assess sources of heterogeneity. We used the standard and modified Newcastle-Ottawa Scales (NOS) to assess studies' quality. Results Our search identified 1043 articles. We included 16 studies from the original search and 2 in-press as of October 2020 in our analysis. All were observational studies. Our analysis included 364 patients; mean age was 56.8 (SD 7.12) years, and 68% were men. The intubation rate was 28% (95% CI 20%–38%, I2 = 63%). The mortality rate among patients who underwent awake PP was 14% (95% CI 7.4%–24.4%). Potential sources of heterogeneity were study design and setting (practice and geographic). Conclusions Our study demonstrated an intubation rate of 28% among hypoxic patients with COVID-19 who underwent awake PP. Awake PP in COVID-19 is feasible and practical, and more rigorous research is needed to confirm this promising intervention.

Details

ISSN :
15328171
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American journal of emergency medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....11deb8f8cf29c443e6efb0f15109b7ec