A Multicenter Retrospective Study Predicting Early Noninvasive Ventilation Failure in Patients With Acute Hypoxic Respiratory Failure
Xiaoyi Liu, Hui Liu, Lijuan Chen, Xiangde Zheng, Hui Ran, Lili Chen, Rui Zhou, Yufeng Wang

TL;DR
The study shows that the VOX index can predict early failure of noninvasive ventilation in patients with acute hypoxic respiratory failure.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the VOX index's predictive value for noninvasive ventilation failure, offering a new clinical tool.
Findings
A VOX value > 20.45 after 2 hours of NIV treatment predicts better outcomes and lower intubation rates.
The VOX index has high specificity (94.4%) and moderate sensitivity (69.1%) for predicting NIV failure.
Low-risk patients showed significant improvements in oxygenation and reduced mortality compared to high-risk patients.
Abstract
Volume OXygenation (VOX) index has good efficacy in predicting the failure of high‐flow nasal cannula therapy. However, its predictive value for treatment failure in patients receiving noninvasive ventilation (NIV) remains uncertain. Patients who underwent early NIV treatment were grouped based on their 2‐h NIV VOX Youden index. The low‐risk group consisted of patients with a VOX value > 20.45 (n = 188), while the high‐risk group included those with a VOX value ≤ 20.45 (n = 200). Baseline data and arterial blood gas values were collected at 2, 12, and 24 h after NIV initiation. Compared to the low‐risk group, the high‐risk group exhibited higher SOFA scores, respiratory rates, and heart rates, along with a lower oxygenation index (P/F) (all p < 0.05). Following NIV treatment, the low‐risk group showed a more significant increase in P/F values at 2 h, 12 h, and 24 h after NIV…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory Support and Mechanisms · Airway Management and Intubation Techniques · Nosocomial Infections in ICU
