Intraoperative oxygenation in adult patients undergoing surgery (iOPS): a retrospective observational study across 29 UK hospitals
Intraoperative oxygenation in adult patients undergoing surgery (iOPS): a retrospective observational study across 29 UK hospitals
Background: considerable controversy remains about how much oxygen patients should receive during surgery. The 2016 World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines recommend that intubated patients receive a fractional inspired oxygen concentration (FIO2) of 0.8 throughout abdominal surgery to reduce the risk of surgical site infection. However, this recommendation has been widely criticised by anaesthetists and evidence from other clinical contexts has suggested that giving a high concentration of oxygen might worsen patient outcomes. This retrospective multi-centre observational study aimed to ascertain intraoperative oxygen administration practice by anaesthetists across parts of the UK.
Methods: patients undergoing general anaesthesia with an arterial catheter in situ across hospitals affiliated with two anaesthetic trainee audit networks (PLAN, SPARC) were eligible for inclusion unless undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass. Demographic and intraoperative oxygenation data, haemoglobin saturation and positive end-expiratory pressure were retrieved from anaesthetic charts and arterial blood gases (ABGs) over five consecutive weekdays in April and May 2017.
Results: three hundred seventy-eight patients from 29 hospitals were included. Median age was 66 years, 205 (54.2%) were male and median ASA grade was 3. One hundred eight (28.6%) were emergency cases. An anticipated difficult airway or raised BMI was documented preoperatively in 31 (8.2%) and 45 (11.9%) respectively. Respiratory or cardiac comorbidity was documented in 103 (27%) and 83 (22%) respectively. SpO2 < 96% was documented in 83 (22%) patients, with 7 (1.9%) patients desaturating < 88% at any point intraoperatively. The intraoperative FIO2 ranged from 0.25 to 1.0, and median PaO2/FIO2 ratios for the first four arterial blood gases taken in each case were 24.6/0.5, 23.4/0.49, 25.7/0.46 and 25.4/0.47 respectively.
Conclusions: intraoperative oxygenation currently varies widely. An intraoperative FIO2 of 0.5 currently represents standard intraoperative practice in the UK, with surgical patients often experiencing moderate levels of hyperoxaemia. This differs from both WHO’s recommendation of using an FIO2 of 0.8 intraoperatively, and also, the value most previous interventional oxygen therapy trials have used to represent standard care (typically FIO2 = 0.3). These findings should be used to aid the design of future intraoperative oxygen studies.
Morkane, Clare M.
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McKenna, Helen
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Cumpstey, Andrew F.
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Oldman, Alex H.
118c54fc-4573-44c0-8351-03221c3de3fd
Grocott, Michael P.W.
1e87b741-513e-4a22-be13-0f7bb344e8c2
Martin, Daniel S.
3e441b48-9221-4308-8ae6-49cbde20753f
Pan London Perioperative Audit and Research Network (PLAN), South Coast Perioperative Audit and Research Collaboration (SPARC)
2018
Morkane, Clare M.
be34302f-9922-45f2-a85f-6f45ea0b4efd
McKenna, Helen
290d5c11-17ed-4578-ba82-cfeffdf1c924
Cumpstey, Andrew F.
050a389c-f550-4453-a80a-f1a6e57db923
Oldman, Alex H.
118c54fc-4573-44c0-8351-03221c3de3fd
Grocott, Michael P.W.
1e87b741-513e-4a22-be13-0f7bb344e8c2
Martin, Daniel S.
3e441b48-9221-4308-8ae6-49cbde20753f
Morkane, Clare M., McKenna, Helen, Cumpstey, Andrew F., Oldman, Alex H., Grocott, Michael P.W. and Martin, Daniel S.
,
Pan London Perioperative Audit and Research Network (PLAN), South Coast Perioperative Audit and Research Collaboration (SPARC)
(2018)
Intraoperative oxygenation in adult patients undergoing surgery (iOPS): a retrospective observational study across 29 UK hospitals.
Perioperative Medicine, 7, [17].
(doi:10.1186/s13741-018-0098-3).
Abstract
Background: considerable controversy remains about how much oxygen patients should receive during surgery. The 2016 World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines recommend that intubated patients receive a fractional inspired oxygen concentration (FIO2) of 0.8 throughout abdominal surgery to reduce the risk of surgical site infection. However, this recommendation has been widely criticised by anaesthetists and evidence from other clinical contexts has suggested that giving a high concentration of oxygen might worsen patient outcomes. This retrospective multi-centre observational study aimed to ascertain intraoperative oxygen administration practice by anaesthetists across parts of the UK.
Methods: patients undergoing general anaesthesia with an arterial catheter in situ across hospitals affiliated with two anaesthetic trainee audit networks (PLAN, SPARC) were eligible for inclusion unless undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass. Demographic and intraoperative oxygenation data, haemoglobin saturation and positive end-expiratory pressure were retrieved from anaesthetic charts and arterial blood gases (ABGs) over five consecutive weekdays in April and May 2017.
Results: three hundred seventy-eight patients from 29 hospitals were included. Median age was 66 years, 205 (54.2%) were male and median ASA grade was 3. One hundred eight (28.6%) were emergency cases. An anticipated difficult airway or raised BMI was documented preoperatively in 31 (8.2%) and 45 (11.9%) respectively. Respiratory or cardiac comorbidity was documented in 103 (27%) and 83 (22%) respectively. SpO2 < 96% was documented in 83 (22%) patients, with 7 (1.9%) patients desaturating < 88% at any point intraoperatively. The intraoperative FIO2 ranged from 0.25 to 1.0, and median PaO2/FIO2 ratios for the first four arterial blood gases taken in each case were 24.6/0.5, 23.4/0.49, 25.7/0.46 and 25.4/0.47 respectively.
Conclusions: intraoperative oxygenation currently varies widely. An intraoperative FIO2 of 0.5 currently represents standard intraoperative practice in the UK, with surgical patients often experiencing moderate levels of hyperoxaemia. This differs from both WHO’s recommendation of using an FIO2 of 0.8 intraoperatively, and also, the value most previous interventional oxygen therapy trials have used to represent standard care (typically FIO2 = 0.3). These findings should be used to aid the design of future intraoperative oxygen studies.
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 July 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 July 2018
Published date: 2018
Additional Information:
A correction has been attached to this output located at https://perioperativemedicinejournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13741-018-0106-7 and https://doi.org/10.1186/s13741-018-0106-7
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Local EPrints ID: 422676
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/422676
ISSN: 2047-0525
PURE UUID: 9bfcbfce-5e56-4e16-b8d9-dd4c17f46cb1
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Date deposited: 30 Jul 2018 16:30
Last modified: 12 Nov 2024 02:44
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Contributors
Author:
Clare M. Morkane
Author:
Helen McKenna
Author:
Andrew F. Cumpstey
Author:
Alex H. Oldman
Author:
Daniel S. Martin
Corporate Author: Pan London Perioperative Audit and Research Network (PLAN), South Coast Perioperative Audit and Research Collaboration (SPARC)
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