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Respiratory supports of COVID-19 patients in intensive care unit: A systematic review

Lichen Ouyang, Muqing Yu, Yan Zhu, Jie Gong

2021Heliyon21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

IntroductionWe aimed to describe the respiratory supports and determine their association with clinical outcomes of COVID-19 patients in intensive care unit (ICU).MethodsA systemic literature search was conducted in PubMed, EMBASE, MedRxiv and BioRxiv database from December 2019 to 2 July 2020. Studies reporting the application of respiratory supports in COVID-19 patients admitted to ICU were included.ResultsForty studies with 15320 COVID-19 patients were included in this systematic review. The proportion of invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) application in ICU patients with COVID-19 was 73.8%. Further analysis elucidated that the use rate of IMV in Asia, Europe and North America was 47%, 76.2% and 80.2%, respectively. The proportion of patients treated with prone positioning and IMV was 29.4%. 25.5% of COVID-19 patients requiring IMV developed ventilator-associated pneumonia. The mortality of patients treated with IMV was 51.1%, while only 17.5% of critically ill COVID-19 patients treated with non-IMV respiratory support died. Additionally, the utilization rate of IMV in non-survival patients was shown 17.26-folds (95%CI 2.89–103.24, p = 0.002) higher than that in survival patients, while the use rate of ECMO was no significant difference.ConclusionsOur findings highlight respiratory supports of COVID-19 patients admitted to ICU in different continents. IMV is a life-saving strategy for critically ill COVID-19 patients with ARDS, yet the mortality remains very high.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineARDSIntensive care unitMechanical ventilationCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PneumoniaIntensive careIntensive care medicineMortality rateRespiratory systemAPACHE IIViral pneumoniaInternal medicineEmergency medicineLungInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseRespiratory Support and MechanismsMechanical Circulatory Support DevicesCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies
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