Comparison of High-Flow Nasal Canula and Non-Invasive Mechanical Ventilation in Treating COVID-19 Patients

Author(s)

Gu Q, Dai Y, Harvey A
Philips Research North America, Brighton, MA, USA

Presentation Documents

OBJECTIVES: The World Health Organization has declared COVID-19 a global pandemic in March 2020. Multiple COVID-19 waves are putting tremendous stress on healthcare systems. Evidence showed that high-flow nasal canula (HFNC) reduced the need for mechanical ventilation and shortened the time to clinical recovery among patients with severe COVID-19. This study aimed to assess the effect of using HFNC compared to non-invasive mechanical ventilation (NIV), on adult patients with COVID-19.

METHODS: This retrospective study included patients hospitalized due to COVID-19 between October 2020 to December 2021 with appropriate ICD-10 diagnosis recorded in a commercially available, all-payer administrative database across 300+ hospitals. The identified patients were divided in two cohorts, one being the patients treated with HFNC as the first line respiratory support and another with NIV. Outcomes included all-cause mortality rate and length of stay. Multivariable analyses were performed to adjust for baseline characteristics.

RESULTS: Out of 16,534 eligible patients, 4,334 patients received HFNC as the first line respiratory support, whereas 12,200 received NIV. The all-cause mortality rate was 20.24% and 37.14% in the HFNC and NIV group, respectively. After adjusting for baseline characteristics, the all-cause mortality rate in the HFNC group was lower compared to NIV (odds ratio [OR], 0.51; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.47-0.55; p<0.001). The total length of stay was around 15 days for all patients. No different was observed between groups ( mean difference 0.3 days; 95% CI, -0.27 – 0.92 days; p>0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: Patients treated with HFNC showed lower mortality rates compared to NIV for hospitalized COVID-19 patients. However, further studies are still needed to better elucidate the clinical and economic benefit of HFNC in COVID-19 patients.

Conference/Value in Health Info

2023-05, ISPOR 2023, Boston, MA, USA

Value in Health, Volume 26, Issue 6, S2 (June 2023)

Code

MT27

Topic

Clinical Outcomes, Medical Technologies, Study Approaches

Topic Subcategory

Clinical Outcomes Assessment, Electronic Medical & Health Records, Medical Devices

Disease

Infectious Disease (non-vaccine)

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