A randomised controlled trial and cost-effectiveness analysis of high-frequency oscillatory ventilation against conventional artificial ventilation for adults with acute respiratory distress syndrome. The Oscar (Oscillation in ARDS) study
A randomised controlled trial and cost-effectiveness analysis of high-frequency oscillatory ventilation against conventional artificial ventilation for adults with acute respiratory distress syndrome. The Oscar (Oscillation in ARDS) study
Background: Patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) require artificial ventilation but this treatment may produce secondary lung damage. High-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) may reduce this damage. Objectives: To determine the clinical benefit and cost-effectiveness of HFOV in patients with ARDS compared with standard mechanical ventilation. Design: A parallel, randomised, unblinded clinical trial. Setting: UK intensive care units. Participants: Mechanically ventilated patients with a partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood/fractional concentration of inspired oxygen (P: F) ratio of 26.7 kPa (200 mmHg) or less and an expected duration of ventilation of at least 2 days at recruitment. Interventions: Treatment arm HFOV using a Novalung R100® ventilator (Metran Co. Ltd, Saitama, Japan) ventilator until the start of weaning. Control arm Conventional mechanical ventilation using the devices available in the participating centres. Main outcome measures: The primary clinical outcome was all-cause mortality at 30 days after randomisation. The primary health economic outcome was the cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained. Results: One hundred and sixty-six of 398 patients (41.7%) randomised to the HFOV group and 163 of 397 patients (41.1%) randomised to the conventional mechanical ventilation group died within 30 days of randomisation (p = 0.85), for an absolute difference of 0.6% [95% confidence interval (CI) −6.1% to 7.5%]. After adjustment for study centre, sex, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score, and the initial P: F ratio, the odds ratio for survival in the conventional ventilation group was 1.03 (95% CI 0.75 to 1.40; p = 0.87 logistic regression). Survival analysis showed no difference in the probability of survival up to 12 months after randomisation. The average QALY at 1 year in the HFOV group was 0.302 compared to 0.246. This gives an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) for the cost to society per QALY of £88,790 and an ICER for the cost to the NHS per QALY of £78,260. Conclusions: The use of HFOV had no effect on 30-day mortality in adult patients undergoing mechanical ventilation for ARDS and no economic advantage. We suggest that further research into avoiding ventilator-induced lung injury should concentrate on ventilatory strategies other than HFOV.
1-154
Lall, Ranjit
2dd7769c-3fa4-43f5-942d-188f67c2bddd
Hamilto N, Patrick
b702829e-47f9-4af1-bbc3-2b274705a521
Young, Duncan
70edf578-9c08-4a7c-b740-e9c5e222cfb5
Shah, Sanjoy
2b91e5f4-c20c-4322-a66e-8befbe7bfc19
Mackenzie, Iain
906a9b03-6d22-4fb6-a96c-3941470ed76d
Cusack, Rebecca
dfb1595f-2792-4f76-ac6d-da027cf40146
1 March 2015
Lall, Ranjit
2dd7769c-3fa4-43f5-942d-188f67c2bddd
Hamilto N, Patrick
b702829e-47f9-4af1-bbc3-2b274705a521
Young, Duncan
70edf578-9c08-4a7c-b740-e9c5e222cfb5
Shah, Sanjoy
2b91e5f4-c20c-4322-a66e-8befbe7bfc19
Mackenzie, Iain
906a9b03-6d22-4fb6-a96c-3941470ed76d
Cusack, Rebecca
dfb1595f-2792-4f76-ac6d-da027cf40146
The OSCAR collaborators
(2015)
A randomised controlled trial and cost-effectiveness analysis of high-frequency oscillatory ventilation against conventional artificial ventilation for adults with acute respiratory distress syndrome. The Oscar (Oscillation in ARDS) study.
Health Technology Assessment, 19 (23), .
(doi:10.3310/hta19230).
Abstract
Background: Patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) require artificial ventilation but this treatment may produce secondary lung damage. High-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) may reduce this damage. Objectives: To determine the clinical benefit and cost-effectiveness of HFOV in patients with ARDS compared with standard mechanical ventilation. Design: A parallel, randomised, unblinded clinical trial. Setting: UK intensive care units. Participants: Mechanically ventilated patients with a partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood/fractional concentration of inspired oxygen (P: F) ratio of 26.7 kPa (200 mmHg) or less and an expected duration of ventilation of at least 2 days at recruitment. Interventions: Treatment arm HFOV using a Novalung R100® ventilator (Metran Co. Ltd, Saitama, Japan) ventilator until the start of weaning. Control arm Conventional mechanical ventilation using the devices available in the participating centres. Main outcome measures: The primary clinical outcome was all-cause mortality at 30 days after randomisation. The primary health economic outcome was the cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained. Results: One hundred and sixty-six of 398 patients (41.7%) randomised to the HFOV group and 163 of 397 patients (41.1%) randomised to the conventional mechanical ventilation group died within 30 days of randomisation (p = 0.85), for an absolute difference of 0.6% [95% confidence interval (CI) −6.1% to 7.5%]. After adjustment for study centre, sex, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score, and the initial P: F ratio, the odds ratio for survival in the conventional ventilation group was 1.03 (95% CI 0.75 to 1.40; p = 0.87 logistic regression). Survival analysis showed no difference in the probability of survival up to 12 months after randomisation. The average QALY at 1 year in the HFOV group was 0.302 compared to 0.246. This gives an incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) for the cost to society per QALY of £88,790 and an ICER for the cost to the NHS per QALY of £78,260. Conclusions: The use of HFOV had no effect on 30-day mortality in adult patients undergoing mechanical ventilation for ARDS and no economic advantage. We suggest that further research into avoiding ventilator-induced lung injury should concentrate on ventilatory strategies other than HFOV.
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Published date: 1 March 2015
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© Queen’s Printer and Controller of HMSO 2015.
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Local EPrints ID: 498051
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498051
ISSN: 1366-5278
PURE UUID: 05980c84-7256-4ef3-8b15-e6d40323e5da
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Date deposited: 06 Feb 2025 18:15
Last modified: 07 Feb 2025 02:58
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Contributors
Author:
Ranjit Lall
Author:
Patrick Hamilto N
Author:
Duncan Young
Author:
Sanjoy Shah
Author:
Iain Mackenzie
Author:
Rebecca Cusack
Corporate Author: The OSCAR collaborators
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