High flow nasal cannula for respiratory support in term infants

Aug 5, 2023The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

High flow nasal tubes to help breathing in full-term newborns

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Abstract

Eight studies involving 654 participants were included to assess high flow nasal cannula (HFNC) for respiratory support in term infants.

  • HFNC may have little to no effect on treatment failure, with evidence indicating a risk ratio (RR) of 0.98, but this finding is associated with very low certainty.
  • There were no reported deaths among the infants in studies comparing HFNC to other non-invasive respiratory support methods.
  • HFNC likely results in little to no difference in the length of stay in the intensive care unit, with a mean difference of 0.90 days.
  • Evidence suggests HFNC may reduce the incidence of nasal trauma (RR 0.16) and abdominal overdistension (RR 0.22), although this evidence is very uncertain.
  • When compared to low flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy, HFNC may slightly reduce treatment failure (RR 0.44), but the certainty of this evidence is low.
  • There is insufficient evidence to formulate guidelines on HFNC use for respiratory support in term infants, indicating a need for larger, robust trials.

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