# Effect of lung volume preservation during spontaneous breathing trial on successful extubation in patients receiving mechanical ventilation: protocol for a multicenter clinical trial

**Authors:** Carles Subirà, Gina Rognoni, Herbert Baquerizo, Carolina García, Sara Cabañes, Maria de la Torre, Beatriz Quevedo, Cristina Pedrós, Ana I. Tizón, Natalia Murillo, Laura Parro, Fernando Eiras, Gemma Rialp, Susana Altaba, Alejandro González-Castro, Andrés F. Pacheco, Pablo Bayoumi, Norma Gómez-Medrano, Imma Vallverdú, Áurea Higón, María D. Navarro, Alirio Falcón, Elena Keough, David Arizo, Juan F. Martínez, Núria Durán, Raquel Rodríguez, Melinda R. Popoviciu-Koborzan, Isabel Guerrero, Pablo Concha, Patricia Barral, Montserrat Batlle, Sílvia Cano, Silvia Garcia-Castrillon, Xavier Andorrà, Yenifher Tua, Anna Arnau, Rafael Fernández

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13063-024-08297-1 · 2024-07-16

## TL;DR

This study tests whether preserving lung volume during weaning from mechanical ventilation improves successful extubation outcomes in patients.

## Contribution

The novel approach combines pressure-support ventilation with PEEP and avoids suctioning to preserve lung volume during extubation.

## Key findings

- The trial will compare extubation success rates between standard and lung-volume-preservation weaning methods.
- Ultrasound measurements will assess lung aeration and respiratory muscle changes before and after the trial.
- Results may guide clinical decisions for high-risk patients by identifying the role of lung volume preservation.

## Abstract

In standard weaning from mechanical ventilation, a successful spontaneous breathing test (SBT) consisting of 30 min 8 cmH2O pressure-support ventilation (PSV8) without positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is followed by extubation with continuous suctioning; however, these practices might promote derecruitment. Evidence supports the feasibility and safety of extubation without suctioning. Ultrasound can assess lung aeration and respiratory muscles. We hypothesize that weaning aiming to preserve lung volume can yield higher rates of successful extubation.

This multicenter superiority trial will randomly assign eligible patients to receive either standard weaning [SBT: 30-min PSV8 without PEEP followed by extubation with continuous suctioning] or lung-volume-preservation weaning [SBT: 30-min PSV8 + 5 cmH2O PEEP followed by extubation with positive pressure without suctioning]. We will compare the rates of successful extubation and reintubation, ICU and hospital stays, and ultrasound measurements of the volume of aerated lung (modified lung ultrasound score), diaphragm and intercostal muscle thickness, and thickening fraction before and after successful or failed SBT. Patients will be followed for 90 days after randomization.

We aim to recruit a large sample of representative patients (N = 1600). Our study cannot elucidate the specific effects of PEEP during SBT and of positive pressure during extubation; the results will show the joint effects derived from the synergy of these two factors. Although universal ultrasound monitoring of lungs, diaphragm, and intercostal muscles throughout weaning is unfeasible, if derecruitment is a major cause of weaning failure, ultrasound may help clinicians decide about extubation in high-risk and borderline patients.

The Research Ethics Committee (CEIm) of the Fundació Unió Catalana d’Hospitals approved the study (CEI 22/67 and 23/26). Registered at ClinicalTrials.gov in August 2023. Identifier: NCT05526053.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13063-024-08297-1.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11251308