Early Changes in ROX Index Predicts Treatment Failure After Awake Prone Positioning in Acute Respiratory Failure: Study

Written By :  Dr.Niharika Harsha B
Medically Reviewed By :  Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2024-11-21 02:30 GMT   |   Update On 2024-11-21 07:10 GMT

A recent groundbreaking study conducted on COVID-19 patients found the predictive value of the respiratory rate-oxygenation (ROX) index in acute respiratory failure. The study found that changes in the ROX index after the first awake-prone positioning session led to intubation and death as per the findings published in the journal Intensive Care Medicine.

Proning is a method of treating intubated and sedated patients by making them lie on their stomachs. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many physicians found beneficial effects of treating individuals in prone positions. However, the accurate physiological parameters that have to be monitored after a session of awake-prone positioning in individuals with acute respiratory failure are not known. Hence, researchers conducted a study to identify the early physiologic changes that are linked to the need for invasive mechanical ventilation or death in patients with acute respiratory failure after the first session of awake-prone positioning.

a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study was carried out by including adult patients with acute respiratory failure related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) treated with awake prone positioning. the association between relative changes in physiological variables such as oxygenation, respiratory rate, pCO2, and respiratory rate-oxygenation [ROX] index was assessed within the first 6 h of the first awake prone positioning session with treatment failure. A treatment was considered to be a failure when there arose a necessity for endotracheal intubation and/or death within 7 days.

Findings:

  • About 244 patients that included 70 females (29%), with a mean age of 60 were included.
  • Nearly Seventy-one (29%) patients experienced awake-prone positioning failure.
  • ROX index was found to be the main physiologic predictor.
  • Patients with treatment failure had lower mean [SD] ROX index at baseline [5 (1.4) versus 6.6 (2.2), p < 0.0001] and within 6 h of prone positioning [5.6 (1.7) versus 8.7 (2.8), p < 0.0001].
  • After adjusting for baseline characteristics and severity, a relative increase of the ROX index compared to baseline was associated with lower odds of failure.

Thus, the study concluded that the ROX index was the main predictive factor for intubation and mortality in individuals treated by awake-prone positioning.

Further reading: Olmos M, Esperatti M, Fuentes N, et al. Early physiologic changes after awake prone positioning predict clinical outcomes in patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure. Intensive Care Med. Published online November 14, 2024. doi:10.1007/s00134-024-07690-3

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Article Source : Intensive Care Medicine

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