Acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure after treatment with lower tidal volume ventilation facilitated by extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal: long-term outcomes from the REST randomised trial

Thorax. 2023 Aug;78(8):767-774. doi: 10.1136/thorax-2022-218874. Epub 2022 Oct 5.

Abstract

Introduction: Lower tidal volume ventilation, facilitated by veno-venous extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal (vv-ECCO2R), does not improve 90-day mortality in patients with acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure (AHRF). The aim of this analysis was to evaluate the effect of this therapeutic strategy on long-term outcomes.

Methods: This was a prespecified analysis of the REST trial, a UK-wide multicentre randomised clinical trial that compared lower tidal volume ventilation, facilitated by vv-ECCO2R (intervention), with standard care in the treatment of patients with moderate-to-severe AHRF. Mortality to 2 years was assessed, while respiratory function, post-traumatic stress disorder, cognitive function and health-related quality of life were evaluated in survivors at 1 year using standardised questionnaires.

Results: Of 412 patients enrolled into the REST trial, 391 (95%) had 2-year mortality outcome data available. There was no difference in the time to death between intervention and standard care (HR 1.08 (0.81, 1.44); log-rank test p=0.61). 161 patients alive at 1 year provided at least one questionnaire response. There was no difference in respiratory function, post-traumatic stress disorder, cognitive dysfunction or health-related quality of life between patients allocated to intervention or standard care.

Conclusion: Lower-tidal volume ventilation facilitated by vv-ECCO2R does not affect 1-year mortality in patients with moderate-to-severe AHRF. Of the patients who provided questionnaire responses, there was no treatment effect on long-term respiratory function, post-traumatic stress disorder, cognitive dysfunction or health-related quality of life.

Trial registration number: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02654327.

Keywords: ARDS.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial
  • Multicenter Study

MeSH terms

  • Carbon Dioxide*
  • Humans
  • Lung
  • Quality of Life
  • Respiration, Artificial
  • Respiratory Insufficiency* / etiology
  • Respiratory Insufficiency* / therapy
  • Tidal Volume / physiology

Substances

  • Carbon Dioxide

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT02654327