Health technology assessment (Winchester, England)

Comparing high-flow nasal oxygen and continuous airway pressure for non-invasive breathing support in critically ill children

Updated

Abstract

In a study involving 1,200 children, median time to liberation from respiratory support was 52.9 hours for high-flow nasal cannula and 47.9 hours for continuous positive airway pressure.

  • High-flow nasal cannula may be non-inferior to continuous positive airway pressure in terms of time to liberation from respiratory support in acutely ill children.
  • In the step-up trial, children using high-flow nasal cannula had lower sedation use (27.7%) compared to those on continuous positive airway pressure (37%).
  • The mean duration of hospital stay was shorter for high-flow nasal cannula (13.8 days) compared to continuous positive airway pressure (19.5 days).
  • In the step-down trial, median time to liberation was 50.5 hours for high-flow nasal cannula versus 42.9 hours for continuous positive airway pressure.
  • Mortality at day 180 was higher in the high-flow nasal cannula group (5.6%) compared to continuous positive airway pressure (2.4%).

Simplified

Full Text

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