Evaluation of decision support to wean patients from mechanical ventilation in intensive care: a prospective study reporting clinical and physiological outcomes
Marcela P. Vizcaychipi, Dan S. Karbing, Laura Martins, Amandeep Gupta, Jeronimo Moreno-Cuesta, Manu Naik, Ingeborg Welters, Suveer Singh, Georgina Randell, Leyla Osman, Stephen E. Rees

TL;DR
A study tested a decision support system for weaning patients off ventilators but found no significant change in ventilation duration, though fewer adverse events were observed.
Contribution
The study evaluated a novel open-loop decision support system for ventilator weaning in ICU patients, revealing potential safety benefits despite no change in ventilation duration.
Findings
No significant difference in duration of mechanical ventilation between the intervention and usual care groups.
Patients in the intervention group had lower rates of adverse events, including fewer hypoxaemic events.
The decision support system's advice was applied in 88% of cases, with changes mainly in inspired oxygen fraction.
Abstract
This study investigated the clinical and physiological response to use of the BEACON Caresystem, a bedside open-loop decision support system providing advice to guide clinicians when weaning patients from invasive mechanical ventilation. Multicenter prospective study conducted in five adult intensive care units in the UK. Following screening and assent, intubated patients mechanically ventilated for > 24 h were randomized to intervention or usual care. Intervention consisted of application of the BEACON Caresystem’s advice on tidal volume/inspiratory pressure, inspired oxygen, respiratory rate and PEEP. Usual care was defined as local clinical practice. The primary outcome was duration of mechanical ventilation. Secondary outcomes quantified prolonged intubation and survival; adverse events; ventilator settings and physiological state; time spent in ventilator modes; links to other…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory Support and Mechanisms · Intensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders · Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation
