Journal Information
Vol. 47. Issue 2.
Pages 115-117 (February 2023)
Vol. 47. Issue 2.
Pages 115-117 (February 2023)
Scientific Letter
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Mechanical power greater than 17 joules/min in patients with respiratory failure secondary to SARS-CoV-2 infection
Poder mecánico mayor de 17 julios/min en pacientes con insuficiencia respiratoria secundaria a infección por SARS-CoV-2
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A. González-Castro
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e409@humv.es

Corresponding author.
, E. Cuenca Fito, A. Fernandez-Rodriguez, P. Escudero Acha, J.C. Rodríguez Borregán, Y. Peñasco
Servicio de Medicina Intensiva, Hospital Universitario Marqués de Valdecilla, Santander, Spain
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Table 1. Description of the main differences of the variables between patients treated with MP≤17J/min and those treated with MP>17J/min.
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Dear Editor:

In mechanical ventilation (MV), the configuration of ventilation parameters is key for pulmonary protection purposes. The term mechanical power is used to define the amount of energy transmitted from the ventilator to pulmonary parenchyma in each respiratory cycle.1 The most recent medical literature available confirms that in patients on MV due to SARS-CoV-2-induced respiratory failure, a MP threshold of 17J/min could be associated with a higher risk of death.2

In this context, our objective was to study the association of MP with short-term survival (28 days) of patients admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU) due to SARS-CoV-2. Therefore, using data from our registry of patients with COVID-19 developed after gaining approval from the local research ethics committee and obtaining consent from the patients or their legal representatives (written or over the phone) we conducted a retrospective analysis of all the cases admitted to our ICU from March 2020 through July 2021 who had been mechanically ventilated due to SARS-CoV-2-induced ARDS. Sample was consecutive and divided into 2 different cohorts based on the value of MP within the first 24h after endotracheal intubation: MP17J/min and MP>17J/min. MP was measured using the simplified formula proposed by Gattinoni et al.3

A descriptive analysis of the sample was initially conducted. Afterwards, a 28-day survival analysis was conducted with the Kaplan-Meier method for the variable of time of death (Log-rank test). To avoid confounding factors, a multivariable analysis of survival was conducted adjusting a Cox model (method: forward; introduction of variables to the model if P<.2, and exclusion of variables if P>.5; status: death at the ICU at 28 days; covariables used: age, the PaO2/FiO2 ratio prior to intubation, and the value of pulmonary compliance). Statistical significance was established at P<.05 for all analyses.

Out of the 565 patients admitted to the ICU with COVID-19 during the study period, only those with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections who received controlled MV were eventually analyzed. Also, the variables necessary to estimate MP in the supine position were estimated, after sedation and muscular paralysis, and within the first 24h after starting MV.

Table 1 shows the main differences among the 79 patients analyzed categorized based on their MP.

Table 1.

Description of the main differences of the variables between patients treated with MP17J/min and those treated with MP>17J/min.

Variables  Patients treated with MP17J/min=41  Patients treated with MP>17J/min=38  P 
Age (years), mean (SD)  63 (38)  65 (42)  .35 
Sex, n (%)
Men  26 (63)  32 (84)  .96 
Main comorbidities, n (%)
AHT  20 (49)  23 (71)  .75 
DM  4 (10)  10 (26)  .10 
Obesity  6 (15)  11 (29)  .24 
Dyslipidemia  18 (44)  16 (42)  .23 
Smoker  16 (39)  12 (31)  .23 
SOFA score, mean (SD)  3 (3)  4 (3)  .45 
PaO2/FiO2 ratio at ICU admission, mean (SD)  127 (40)  131 (39)  .82 
PaO2/FiO2 ratio before MV, mean (SD)  99 (39)  105 (39)  .93 
PaO2/FiO2 ratio>170 before MV, n (%)  3 (7)  1 (3)  .27 
Laboratory data, mean (SD)
Creatine kinase, mean (SD)  88 (29)  181 (40)  .33 
D-dimer (ng/mL), mean (SD)  1052 (400)  1346 (410)  .03 
Treatment used at the ICU stay, n (%)
Combined immunomodulatory treatment with tocilizumab+corticoid  11 (27)  5 (13)  .13 
Prone position  25 (61)  25 (65)  .66 
Use of HFNO at ICU admission  20 (49)  18 (47)  .29 
Need for vasopressors  21 (51)  25 (66)  .60 
Use of therapy with iNO  3 (7)  1 (16)  .27 
Need for RRT  0 (0)  2 (5)  – 
Antiviral therapies, n (%)
Plasma  12 (29)  12 (31)  .82 
Remdesivir  2 (5)  5 (13)  .28 
Main ventilation parameters (first day on MV), mean (SD)
Tidal volume  465 (36)  480 (48)  .13 
Initial respiratory rate  16 (4)  18 (5)  < .01 
PEEP (cmH2O)  10 (3)  12 (4)  .05 
Ppeak (cmH2O)  27 (3)  32 (6)  < .01 
Compliance (mL/cmH2O)  42 (13)  40 (18)  .22 
Stay at the ICU (days), mean (SD)  11 (9)  16 (15)  < .01 

AHT, arterial hypertension; DM, diabetes mellitus; HFNO, high-flow nasal oxygen; ICU, intensive care unit; iNO, inhaled nitric oxide; MP, mechanical power; MV, mechanical ventilation; PEEP, positive end-expiratory pressure; RRT, renal replacement therapy; SD, standard deviation; SOFA, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score.

The median survival times of both cohorts were 16 days (p25–75: 3–27) for the cohort of patients with MP17J/min vs 11 days (p25–75: 2–18) for the cohort of patients with MP>17J/min (P=.02). The group of patients with MP values>17J/min was associated significantly with greater chances of death at 28 days (OR, 2.91; 95%CI, 1.04–8.09; P=.04) (Fig. 1).

Figure 1.

Kaplan-Meier survival analysis—at 28 days—for mechanical power values>17joules/min and values17joules/min.

(0.19MB).

In the Cox regression analysis, values>17J/min of MP within the first 24h after starting MV were independently associated with mortality (HR, 2.70; 95%CI, 1.31–6.47; P=.02).

Our results are consistent with recent studies that confirmed the adverse events of exposure to higher MP values in critically ill patients treated with MV due to SARS-CoV-2-induced respiratory failure or for a completely different reason.2,4

These findings can be considered expected outcomes if we understand MP as a variable that includes all components traditionally associated with the production of VILI: pressures, volume, flow, respiratory rate. Also, we should mention that rheology theory foresees that energy densities exceeding the resilience of a material would be responsible for the production of VILI. This energy density (energy per unit of surface) invites us, in our routine clinical practice, to assess at all time the association between MP and the alveolar area exposed to the energy supplied.5,6

On the other hand, the appearance of lung alterations (stress raisers)—that can eventually trigger VILI due to the application of MP—seems like a threshold effect phenomenon. In animals used in experiments (Young module or specific lung elastance,7 5.4 cmH2O±2.2 cmH2O) a threshold of 12J/min has been established as an energy power threshold.1 In humans8 (Young module, 13.4 cmH2O±4.1 cmH2O), recent clinical studies confirm that MP levels >18−20J/min are associated with a higher risk of death in patients on MV.9,10

Recognizing MP as a combination of parameters that can predispose to VILI is an important step towards the optimization of MV in critically ill patients.

References
[1]
M. Cressoni, M. Gotti, C. Chiurazzi, D. Massari, I. Algieri, M. Amini, et al.
Mechanical power and development of ventilator-induced lung injury.
Anesthesiology., 124 (2016), pp. 1100-1108
[2]
M.T.U. Schuijt, M.J. Schultz, F. Paulus, A. Serpa Neto, PRoVENT–COVID Collaborative Group.
Association of intensity of ventilation with 28-day mortality in COVID-19 patients with acute respiratory failure: insights from the PRoVENT-COVID study.
Crit Care., 25 (2021), pp. 283
[3]
L. Gattinoni, T. Tonetti, M. Cressoni, P. Cadringher, P. Herrmann, O. Moerer, et al.
Ventilator-related causes of lung injury: the mechanical power.
Intensive Care Med., 42 (2016), pp. 1567-1575
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M. Urner, P. Jüni, B. Hansen, M.S. Wettstein, N.D. Ferguson, E. Fan.
Time-varying intensity of mechanical ventilation and mortality in patients with acute respiratory failure: a registry-based, prospective cohort study.
Lancet Respir Med., 8 (2020), pp. 905-913
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P.L. Silva, L. Ball, P.R.M. Rocco, P. Pelosi.
Power to mechanical power to minimize ventilator-induced lung injury?.
Intensive Care Med Exp., 7 (2019), pp. 38
[6]
I. Modesto, V. Alapont, M. Aguar Carrascosa, A. Medina Villanueva.
Clinical implications of the rheological theory in the prevention of ventilator-induced lung injury. Is mechanical power the solution?.
Med Intensiva (Engl Ed)., 43 (2019), pp. 373-381
[7]
A. Protti, M. Cressoni, A. Santini, T. Langer, C. Mietto, D. Febres, et al.
Lung stress and strain during mechanical ventilation: any safe threshold?.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med., 183 (2011), pp. 1354-1362
[8]
D. Chiumello, E. Carlesso, P. Cadringher, P. Caironi, F. Valenza, F. Polli, et al.
Lung stress and strain during mechanical ventilation for acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med., 178 (2008), pp. 346-355
[9]
A. Serpa Neto, R.O. Deliberato, A.E.W. Johnson, L.D. Bos, P. Amorim, S.M. Pereira, et al.
PROVE Network Investigators. Mechanical power of ventilation is associated with mortality in critically ill patients: an analysis of patients in two observational cohorts.
Intensive Care Med., 44 (2018), pp. 1914-1922
[10]
C. Guérin, L. Papazian, J. Reignier, L. Ayzac, A. Loundou, J.M. Forel, investigators of the Acurasys and Proseva trials.
Effect of driving pressure on mortality in ARDS patients during lung protective mechanical ventilation in two randomized controlled trials.
Crit Care., 20 (2016), pp. 384
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