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Background Survival of patients with acute lung injury or the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has been improved by ventilation with small tidal volumes and the use of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP); however, the optimal level of PEEP has been difficult to determine. In this pilot study, we estimated transpulmonary pressure with the use of esophageal balloon catheters. We reasoned that the use of pleural-pressure measurements, despite the technical limitations to the accuracy of such measurements, would enable us to find a PEEP value that could maintain oxygenation while preventing lung injury due to repeated alveolar collapse or overdistention.
Methods We randomly assigned patients with acute lung injury or ARDS to undergo mechanical ventilation with PEEP adjusted according to measurements of esophageal pressure (the esophageal-pressure–guided group) or according to the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network standard-of-care recommendations (the control group). The primary end point was improvement in oxygenation. The secondary end points included respiratory-system compliance and patient outcomes.
Results The study reached its stopping criterion and was terminated after 61 patients had been enrolled. The ratio of the partial pressure of arterial oxygen to the fraction of inspired oxygen at 72 hours was 88 mm Hg higher in the esophageal-pressure–guided group than in the control group (95% confidence interval, 78.1 to 98.3; P=0.002). This effect was persistent over the entire follow-up time (at 24, 48, and 72 hours; P=0.001 by repeated-measures analysis of variance). Respiratory-system compliance was also significantly better at 24, 48, and 72 hours in the esophageal-pressure–guided group (P=0.01 by repeated-measures analysis of variance).
Conclusions As compared with the current standard of care, a ventilator strategy using esophageal pressures to estimate the transpulmonary pressure significantly improves oxygenation and compliance. Multicenter clinical trials are needed to determine whether this approach should be widely adopted. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00127491
[ClinicalTrials.gov]
.)
We estimated pleural pressure with the use of an esophageal balloon catheter. Although this technique has been validated in healthy human subjects and animals, it has not been systematically applied in patients in the intensive care setting. We reasoned that we could adjust PEEP according to each patient's lung and chest-wall mechanics.8,9,10 We speculated that in patients with high estimated pleural pressure who are undergoing ventilation with conventional ventilator settings, underinflation may cause hypoxemia. In such patients, raising PEEP to maintain a positive transpulmonary pressure might improve aeration and oxygenation without causing overdistention. Conversely, in patients with low pleural pressure, maintaining low PEEP would keep transpulmonary pressure low, preventing overdistention and minimizing the adverse hemodynamic effects of high PEEP.11
We report the results of a randomized, controlled pilot trial involving patients with acute lung injury or ARDS. The trial compared mechanical ventilation directed by esophageal-pressure measurements with mechanical ventilation managed according to the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network (ARDSNet) recommendations.12 We tested the hypothesis that oxygenation in patients can be improved by adjusting PEEP to maintain positive transpulmonary pressures.
Methods
Patients
We performed the trial in the medical and surgical intensive care units (ICUs) of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. The protocol was approved by the institutional review board of the center, and written informed consent was obtained from the patients or their nearest relatives. No commercial entities providing equipment or devices had a role in any aspect of this study.
Patients were included in the study if they had acute lung injury or ARDS according to the American–European Consensus Conference definitions.13 The exclusion criteria included recent injury or other pathologic condition of the esophagus, major bronchopleural fistula, and solid-organ transplantation.
Measurements and Experimental Protocol
While undergoing treatment, the subjects were supine, with the head of the bed elevated to 30 degrees. Airway pressure, tidal volume, and air flow were recorded during mechanical ventilation. An esophageal balloon catheter was passed to a depth of 60 cm from the incisors for measurement of gastric pressure and then withdrawn to a depth of 40 cm to record esophageal pressure during mechanical ventilation. Placement of the balloon in the stomach was confirmed by a transient increase in pressure during a gentle compression of the abdomen and by a qualitative change in the pressure tracing (i.e., an increased cardiac artifact) as the balloon was withdrawn into the esophagus. In approximately one third of the patients, the balloon could not be passed into the stomach, and esophageal placement was confirmed by the presence of a cardiac artifact and the changes in transpulmonary pressure during tidal ventilation. The mixed expired partial pressure of carbon dioxide was measured to allow calculation of physiological dead space. After these initial measurements, patients were randomly assigned with the use of a block-randomization scheme to the control or esophageal-pressure–guided group.
Each patient, while under heavy sedation or paralysis, underwent a recruitment maneuver to standardize the history of lung volume,14 in which airway pressure was increased to 40 cm of water for 30 seconds. If needed, a lower pressure was used to keep the transpulmonary pressure (the difference between the airway pressure and the esophageal pressure) in the physiologic range (<25 cm of water while the patient is in the supine position).15 After the recruitment maneuver, the patient underwent mechanical ventilation according to the treatment assignment.
The patients in the esophageal-pressure–guided group underwent mechanical ventilation with settings determined by the initial esophageal-pressure measurements. Tidal volume was set at 6 ml per kilogram of predicted body weight. The predicted body weight of male patients was calculated as 50+0.91x(centimeters of height–152.4) and that of female patients as 45.5+0.91x(centimeters of height–152.4). PEEP levels were set to achieve a transpulmonary pressure of 0 to 10 cm of water at end expiration, according to a sliding scale based on the partial pressure of arterial oxygen (PaO2) and the fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2) (Figure 1). We also limited tidal volume to keep transpulmonary pressure at less than 25 cm of water at end inspiration, although this limit was rarely approached, and tidal volume was never reduced for this purpose.
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In both groups, the goals of mechanical ventilation included a PaO2 of 55 to 120 mm Hg or a pulse-oximeter reading of 88 to 98%, an arterial pH of 7.30 to 7.45, and a partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide (PaCO2) of 40 to 60 mm Hg, according to the sliding scales in Figure 1. To reduce the need for frequent manipulation of the ventilator settings, the goals for oxygenation in both groups were relaxed from the narrow range of PaO2 values in the ARDSNet study (55 to 80 mm Hg) to a broader range of 55 to 120 mm Hg.
All measurements were repeated 5 minutes after the initiation of experimental or control ventilation and again at 24, 48, and 72 hours. Measurements were also performed as needed after changes were made to ventilator settings because of any clinically significant change in the patient's condition.
Therapies other than mechanical ventilation were administered by members of the primary ICU team, who were unaware of the results of the esophageal-pressure measurements. To avert complications, these team members used protocols to guide hemodynamic resuscitation,16 sedation, weaning from ventilation, and other standard interventions related to ventilator care.17 These care standards were aggressively applied in both groups. After the measurements at 72 hours, the results of pressure measurements were made available to the caregivers, who were free to use or not use them for decisions concerning treatment and ventilator management.
The primary end point of the study was arterial oxygenation, as measured by the ratio of PaO2 to FiO2 (PaO2:FiO2) 72 hours after randomization. The secondary end points included indexes of lung mechanics and gas exchange (respiratory-system compliance and the ratio of physiological dead space to tidal volume), as well as outcomes of the patients (the number of ventilator-free days at 28 days, length of stay in the ICU, and death within 28 days and 180 days after treatment).
Statistical Analysis
In evaluating the PaO2:FiO2 at 72 hours, we decided a priori that a clinically important change in the PaO2:FiO2 would be approximately 20%, with measurement error taken into account. To determine sample size, we chose a minimal average between-groups difference of 40 in the PaO2:FiO2. We conservatively estimated the standard deviation to be 100 (equivalent to a coefficient of variation of 250%); on the basis of this estimate, a sample of 100 patients per group would be required to detect a difference of 40 in the PaO2:FiO2 with 80% power and a two-tailed alpha value of 0.05. Because of the uncertainty in the estimate of standard deviation, we designed the study with the aid of a data safety and monitoring board, whose members were not involved in patient care or data gathering. The board members were instructed to perform an interim analysis after 60 patients had been enrolled, at which point they could recommend stopping the trial if an overwhelming effect was detected on the basis of the critical significance level (P
0.02), as adjusted for the Lan–DeMets alpha-spending function with Pocock boundary. The members of this board also participated in the writing of this article.
Continuous variables with normal distribution are presented as means (±SD) and compared with the use of Student's t-test. Continuous variables with non-normal distributions are presented as medians and interquartile ranges and compared with the use of the Mann–Whitney test. Dichotomous or nominal categorical variables are compared with the use of the chi-square test with normal approximation or Fisher's exact test, as appropriate. We assessed the trend over time in respiratory measurements by comparing the control group and the esophageal-pressure–guided group at 24, 48, and 72 hours with the use of the F test with one degree of freedom for a general linear model with repeated measures. We used sequential hypothesis testing for the assessment of differences between the groups at 72 hours and 24 hours. When a statistically significant difference was found at 72 hours, we performed a repeated-measures analysis and then compared the values at 24 hours. Kaplan–Meier analysis with the log-rank test was applied to compare survival at 180 days between the groups.
In a single prespecified analysis, we adjusted the relative risk by using the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE II) score to estimate the effect of study group on the risk of death within 28 days after treatment. The relative risk was estimated by Poisson regression with conservative robust error variance.18,19 For death within 180 days after treatment, we used a Cox proportional-regression model to compare the control and treatment groups, with adjustment for the APACHE II score at admission. A two-tailed P value less than 0.05 was considered to indicate statistical significance.
Results
The characteristics of the patients in the two groups were well matched at baseline (Table 1). Most patients in both groups were severely ill, with a mean (±SD) APACHE II score of 26.6±6.4 and a median of two failed organs (interquartile range, one to three). We were unable to sedate one patient in the esophageal-pressure–guided group sufficiently to obtain stable esophageal-pressure measurements; this patient is included in the analysis on the basis of the intention-to-treat principle. There were no adverse events or incidents of barotrauma in either group.
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The ventilator settings and physiological measurements at baseline were similar in the two groups (Table 2). Forty-nine patients (80%), including the one patient that we were unable to sedate, met the criteria for ARDS (PaO2:FiO2 <200 mm Hg) (see Table 1 in the Supplementary Appendix, available with the full text of this article at www.nejm.org), and there was no significant difference in baseline PaO2:FiO2 between the groups. The average tidal volume was reduced during the first day of therapy by 67 ml in the control group (P<0.001 by paired t-test) and by 44 ml in the esophageal-pressure–guided group (P<0.001 by paired t-test).
Oxygenation and respiratory-system compliance improved in the esophageal-pressure–guided group as compared with the control group, whereas the ratio of dead space to tidal volume did not significantly differ between the groups during the first 72 hours (Figure 2C). The PaO2:FiO2 improved during the first 72 hours by 131 mm Hg (95% CI, 79 to 182) in the esophageal-pressure–guided group and by 49 mm Hg (95% CI, 12 to 86) in the control group (Table 2). The higher value of PaO2:FiO2 in the esophageal-pressure–guided group than in the control group was evident at 24 hours (P=0.04) (Figure 2A). Respiratory-system compliance was significantly improved and was higher in the esophageal-pressure–guided group than in the control group (P=0.01; repeated-measures analysis of variance at 24, 48, and 72 hours) (Figure 2B).
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Table 4 presents the clinical outcomes, all of which were prespecified secondary outcomes. There was no significant difference between the groups in ventilator-free days at day 28 or length of stay in the ICU. The 28-day mortality rate in the entire study cohort was 17 of 61 patients (28%). As would be expected, the APACHE II score at admission was higher among patients who died than among those who survived (31.5±4.5 vs. 24.7±6.1, P<0.001). However, the baseline PaO2:FiO2 was similar among survivors and nonsurvivors (153.2±53.7 and 143.8±58.0 mm Hg, respectively; P=0.56).
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The mortality rate at 180 days did not differ significantly between the treatment groups; the point estimate for the relative risk of death in the esophageal-pressure–guided group was 0.59 (95% CI, 0.29 to 1.20) as compared with the control group. However, a Kaplan–Meier survival plot (see Figure 2 in the Supplementary Appendix) shows separation between the curves that persists at 180 days. Cox regression modeling showed that after adjustment for baseline APACHE II score (hazard ratio per point, 1.12; 95% CI, 1.04 to 1.22), the hazard ratio for 180-day mortality was 0.52 in the esophageal-pressure–guided group (95% CI, 0.22 to 1.25) as compared with the control group.
Discussion
We found that it is feasible to make repeated measurements of esophageal pressure that are of adequate fidelity and quality to be used to manage the treatment of patients requiring mechanical ventilation. Patients with acute lung injury or ARDS treated in this way had significantly improved oxygenation, as measured by the PaO2:FiO2, and significantly improved respiratory-system compliance. Moreover, these improvements were achieved without elevating transpulmonary pressure at end inspiration above the physiologic range. Finally, these improvements in lung function were associated with a trend toward improved 28-day survival in this group of very sick patients.
Numerous animal models of acute lung injury have shown that reducing end-expiratory lung volume or pressure can be injurious, even when tidal volume or peak pressure is controlled.20,21,22,23,24 In these models, increasing PEEP can be protective.25,26 However, in patients with ARDS, effective adjustment of PEEP to the physiological features of the individual patient has been difficult to achieve. For example, in the ARDSNet study of low tidal volume, PEEP and FiO2 were adjusted according to arterial oxygenation without reference to chest-wall or lung mechanics.12 The subsequent Assessment of Low Tidal Volume and Elevated End-Expiratory Volume to Obviate Lung Injury (known as the ALVEOLI trial) (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00000579 [ClinicalTrials.gov] ) compared an increased level of PEEP with standard PEEP, with both levels adjusted according to the patient's oxygenation, and showed no benefit.1 The recent Lung Open Ventilation Study (NCT00182195 [ClinicalTrials.gov] ) used a similar approach to adjustment of PEEP, without benefit.2 The Expiratory Pressure Study Group trial (NCT00188058 [ClinicalTrials.gov] ) increased PEEP in the intervention group to reach a plateau pressure of 28 to 30 cm of water. This study showed improvements in ventilator-free and organ-failure-free days, oxygenation, and respiratory-system compliance but showed no significant change in survival.3 Other studies, including those using the lower point of maximum curvature on the pressure–volume curve or the stress index, have had mixed results.27,28,29,30,31
The disappointing results of these previous studies may be due in part to their inclusion of patients with elevated pleural or intraabdominal pressure32,33 and elevated esophageal pressure.7 The lungs of such patients may be effectively compressed by high pleural pressures, and their alveoli may collapse at end expiration, despite levels of PEEP that would be adequate in other patients. By using esophageal-pressure measurements to determine PEEP, we may have prevented repeated alveolar collapse or overdistention.5 In the present pilot study, PEEP was lowered in 3 of the 30 patients treated with the use of esophageal pressure to determine PEEP and in 12 of the 31 patients treated according to the ARDSNet protocol. More importantly, PEEP was increased by more than 5 cm of water in 18 patients treated with the use of esophageal pressure to determine PEEP and in only 1 patient treated according to the ARDSnet protocol (Table 3). Thus, the key difference between the two approaches appears to be that measurement of esophageal pressure identifies patients who derive benefit from higher levels of PEEP than would ordinarily be used. Although no adverse events resulting from this strategy were observed, we would have been able to observe only adverse events that occurred at very high frequency, because of the small size of the trial.
There is currently mistrust of the use of esophageal-pressure measurements in supine, critically ill patients, largely because of possible artifacts associated with body position and lung pathologic conditions.34 Although transpulmonary pressure–volume curves have been used to characterize lung disease, esophageal-pressure measurements are not usually used to manage mechanical ventilation in patients with acute lung injury or ARDS.35 However, artifacts in esophageal pressure may not be large enough to obscure differences in esophageal and pleural pressures among patients with acute lung injury or ARDS. For example, the average difference in esophageal pressure measured in the upright and the supine position that was imposed by cardiac weight was 2.9±2.1 cm of water,10 and mechanical abnormalities in diseased lungs may reduce tidal excursions in esophageal pressure by a few centimeters of water.34 By contrast, in patients with acute respiratory failure, end-expiratory esophageal pressures ranged from 4 to 32 cm of water.7
Our study has several limitations. It was a single-center study with physiologically expert staff and a small sample, and although we enrolled medical and surgical patients with various diseases, the findings cannot be generalized until they are confirmed in a larger trial powered to detect changes in appropriate clinical end points. Since our primary end point was oxygenation, which is known to be improved by applied PEEP,36 and improvements in patient oxygenation have been associated with unchanged or increased mortality when these were obtained at the cost of higher airway pressures, one cannot be sure of a favorable outcome until a larger trial has been completed.2,3,12
In conclusion, adjustment of the settings of mechanical ventilation for patients with acute lung injury or ARDS on the basis of the patients' estimated transpulmonary pressure may have clinical benefit. This approach shows promise for improvement in lung function and survival that warrants further investigation.
Supported in part by a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (HL-52586).
Dr. Malhotra reports receiving consulting fees from Respironics. Mr. Ritz reports receiving consulting fees from INO Therapeutics and lecture fees from Tri-anim and serving on the advisory boards of Cardinal Health and Respironics. No other potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.
Source Information
From the Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (D.T., T.S., R.R., A.L., S.H.L.); the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care and the Division of Sleep Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital (A.M.); the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (C.R.O.); the Harvard Clinical Research Institute (V.N.); and Harvard Medical School (D.T., T.S., A.M., C.R.O., A.L., S.H.L.) — all in Boston.
This article (10.1056/NEJMoa0708638) was published at www.nejm.org on November 11, 2008.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Talmor at the Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 1 Deaconess Rd., CC-470, Boston, MA 02215, or at dtalmor{at}bidmc.harvard.edu.
References
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Related Letters:
Esophageal Pressure in Acute Lung Injury
Gusmao D., Tanner A. C., Teles J. M., Valentini R., Rodriguez P., Bonelli I., Walkey A. J., Vieillard-Baron A., Jardin F., Talmor D., Malhotra A., Loring S. H.
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N Engl J Med 2009;
360:831-833, Feb 19, 2009.
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