Ferguson et al report the results of the OSCILLATE randomized controlled trial of HFOV for moderate to severe ARDS in this week’s
NEJM. (A similar RCT of HFOV, the OSCAR trial, is reported in the same issue but I limit most of my commentary to
OSCILLATE because I think it’s a better and more interesting trial and more
data are presented in its report.) A
major question is answered by this trial, but an important question remains
open: is HFOV an acceptable and rational
option as “rescue therapy” in certain patients with “refractory” ARDS? I remain undecided about this question, and
its implications are the subject of this post.
Before I segue to the issue of the study and efficacy of
rescue therapies, let’s consider some nuances of this trial:
·
Patients in both groups received high doses of
sedatives (average midazolam dose for the first week: 8.3 mg/hour in the HFOV
group versus 5.9 mg/hour in the control group – a 41% increase in HFOV). Was this “too much” sedation? What if propofol had been used instead?
·
Patients in the HFOV group received significantly
more paralytics. If you believe the
Papazian data (I don’t) paralytics should confer a mortality benefit in early
ARDS and this should contribute to LOWER mortality in the HFOV group. What if paralytics had been used less
frequently?
·
Does HFOV confer a nocebo effect by virtue of
its “unnatural” pattern of ventilation, its “requirement” for more sedation and
paralysis, or the noise associated with its provision, or its influence on the perceptions
of caregivers and patient’s families (recognizing that deaths after withdrawal
of life support were similar in HFOV versus conventional ventilation (55 versus
49%, P=0.12)?
·
The respiratory frequency in the HFOV group (5.5
Hz) was at the low end of the usual range (3-15 Hz). If a higher frequency (and a lower tidal
volume) had been delivered, would the result have changed? (Probably not.)
·
What about the high plateau pressure in the
control group (32 cm H2O) despite the low tidal volume of 6.1 ml/kg PBW? Why was not tidal volume reduced such that
plateau pressure was lower than the commonly recommended target of 30 cm H2O? Did this make a difference? (Probably not.)
·
Why was mortality higher in the minority (12%) of
control patients who were changed to HFOV (71% mortality)? Is this related to confounding by indication
or reflective of the general harmful effects of HFOV?
·
Why was there a difference between the OSCILLATE
study and the OSCAR study, reported in the same issue, in terms of
mortality? Because OSCILLATE patients
were sicker? Because OSCAR control
patients received higher tidal volumes, thereby curtailing the advantage of
conventional ventilation? I find this
last explanation somewhat compelling.