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Conservative oxygen therapy in mechanically ventilated critically ill adult patients: the UK-ROX randomized clinical trial

Conservative oxygen therapy in mechanically ventilated critically ill adult patients: the UK-ROX randomized clinical trial
Conservative oxygen therapy in mechanically ventilated critically ill adult patients: the UK-ROX randomized clinical trial

Importance: supplemental oxygen is frequently given to patients in intensive care units (ICUs); however, there is insufficient evidence to guide its therapeutic use and to minimize the potential harm caused by administering too little or too much.

Objective: to determine whether reducing exposure to supplemental oxygen through a strategy of conservative oxygen therapy by using a peripheral oxygen saturation (Spo2) target of 90% (range, 88%-92%) reduces mortality at 90 days in mechanically ventilated adult patients receiving supplemental oxygen in the ICU. 

Design, setting, and participants: multicenter, pragmatic, randomized clinical trial conducted in 97 ICUs in the UK including 16500 mechanically ventilated patients receiving supplemental oxygen. Participants were enrolled between May 2021 and November 2024. Follow-up was completed in February 2025. 

Interventions: participants randomized to conservative oxygen therapy (n = 8258) received the lowest fraction of inspired oxygen possible to maintain their Spo2 at 90%. Participants randomized to usual oxygen therapy (n = 8242) received oxygen therapy at the discretion of the treating clinician. 

Main outcomes and measures: the primary outcome was all-cause mortality at 90 days. Secondary outcomes included duration of ICU and acute hospital stay among survivors, days alive and free from organ support at 30 days, and mortality at other time points. 

Results: of 16500 randomized patients, primary outcome data were available for 16394 (8211 in the conservative and 8183 in the usual oxygen therapy group). Randomized groups were similar (median age, 60 [IQR, 48-71] years and 38.2% females in both groups [n = 5652]). Exposure to supplemental oxygen was 29% lower for participants in the conservative oxygen therapy group compared with the usual oxygen therapy group. By 90 days, 2908 participants (35.4%) in the conservative oxygen therapy group had died compared with 2858 (34.9%) in the usual oxygen therapy group. After adjustment for prespecified baseline variables, the risk difference was 0.7 percentage points (95% CI, -0.7 to 2.0; P =.28). There were no significant differences in durations in ICU or hospital stay, days alive and free from organ support at 30 days, or mortality at other time points. 

Conclusions and relevance: in adult patients receiving mechanical ventilation and supplemental oxygen in the ICU, minimizing oxygen exposure through conservative oxygen therapy did not significantly reduce all-cause mortality at 90 days. 

Trial Registration: isrctn.org Identifier: ISRCTN13384956.

0098-7484
398-408
Martin, Daniel S.
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Gould, Doug W.
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Shahid, Tasnin
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Doidge, James C.
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Cowden, Alex
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Sadique, Zia
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Camsooksai, Julie
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Charles, Walton N.
50614629-0c63-4988-8b56-9438f37b4d04
Davey, Miriam
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Francis-Johnson, Amelia
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Garrett, Roger M.
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Grocott, Michael P.W.
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Jones, Joanne
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Lampro, Lamprini
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Mackle, Diane M.
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O'Driscoll, B. Ronan
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Richards-Belle, Alvin
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Rostron, Anthony J.
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Szakmány, Tamás
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Warren, Alex
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Young, Paul J.
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Rowan, Kathryn M.
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Harrison, David A.
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Mouncey, Paul R.
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the UK-ROX Investigators
Martin, Daniel S.
3e441b48-9221-4308-8ae6-49cbde20753f
Gould, Doug W.
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Shahid, Tasnin
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Doidge, James C.
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Cowden, Alex
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Sadique, Zia
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Camsooksai, Julie
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Charles, Walton N.
50614629-0c63-4988-8b56-9438f37b4d04
Davey, Miriam
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Francis-Johnson, Amelia
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Garrett, Roger M.
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Grocott, Michael P.W.
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Jones, Joanne
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Lampro, Lamprini
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Mackle, Diane M.
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O'Driscoll, B. Ronan
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Richards-Belle, Alvin
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Rostron, Anthony J.
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Szakmány, Tamás
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Warren, Alex
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Young, Paul J.
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Rowan, Kathryn M.
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Harrison, David A.
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Mouncey, Paul R.
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Martin, Daniel S., Gould, Doug W. and Shahid, Tasnin , the UK-ROX Investigators (2025) Conservative oxygen therapy in mechanically ventilated critically ill adult patients: the UK-ROX randomized clinical trial. JAMA, 334 (5), 398-408. (doi:10.1001/jama.2025.9663).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Importance: supplemental oxygen is frequently given to patients in intensive care units (ICUs); however, there is insufficient evidence to guide its therapeutic use and to minimize the potential harm caused by administering too little or too much.

Objective: to determine whether reducing exposure to supplemental oxygen through a strategy of conservative oxygen therapy by using a peripheral oxygen saturation (Spo2) target of 90% (range, 88%-92%) reduces mortality at 90 days in mechanically ventilated adult patients receiving supplemental oxygen in the ICU. 

Design, setting, and participants: multicenter, pragmatic, randomized clinical trial conducted in 97 ICUs in the UK including 16500 mechanically ventilated patients receiving supplemental oxygen. Participants were enrolled between May 2021 and November 2024. Follow-up was completed in February 2025. 

Interventions: participants randomized to conservative oxygen therapy (n = 8258) received the lowest fraction of inspired oxygen possible to maintain their Spo2 at 90%. Participants randomized to usual oxygen therapy (n = 8242) received oxygen therapy at the discretion of the treating clinician. 

Main outcomes and measures: the primary outcome was all-cause mortality at 90 days. Secondary outcomes included duration of ICU and acute hospital stay among survivors, days alive and free from organ support at 30 days, and mortality at other time points. 

Results: of 16500 randomized patients, primary outcome data were available for 16394 (8211 in the conservative and 8183 in the usual oxygen therapy group). Randomized groups were similar (median age, 60 [IQR, 48-71] years and 38.2% females in both groups [n = 5652]). Exposure to supplemental oxygen was 29% lower for participants in the conservative oxygen therapy group compared with the usual oxygen therapy group. By 90 days, 2908 participants (35.4%) in the conservative oxygen therapy group had died compared with 2858 (34.9%) in the usual oxygen therapy group. After adjustment for prespecified baseline variables, the risk difference was 0.7 percentage points (95% CI, -0.7 to 2.0; P =.28). There were no significant differences in durations in ICU or hospital stay, days alive and free from organ support at 30 days, or mortality at other time points. 

Conclusions and relevance: in adult patients receiving mechanical ventilation and supplemental oxygen in the ICU, minimizing oxygen exposure through conservative oxygen therapy did not significantly reduce all-cause mortality at 90 days. 

Trial Registration: isrctn.org Identifier: ISRCTN13384956.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 12 June 2025
Published date: 5 August 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505510
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505510
ISSN: 0098-7484
PURE UUID: 5c9b70d9-9880-46b3-b974-0a02cc39ac55
ORCID for Michael P.W. Grocott: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9484-7581

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Date deposited: 10 Oct 2025 17:04
Last modified: 11 Oct 2025 01:48

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Contributors

Author: Daniel S. Martin
Author: Doug W. Gould
Author: Tasnin Shahid
Author: James C. Doidge
Author: Alex Cowden
Author: Zia Sadique
Author: Julie Camsooksai
Author: Walton N. Charles
Author: Miriam Davey
Author: Amelia Francis-Johnson
Author: Roger M. Garrett
Author: Joanne Jones
Author: Lamprini Lampro
Author: Diane M. Mackle
Author: B. Ronan O'Driscoll
Author: Alvin Richards-Belle
Author: Anthony J. Rostron
Author: Tamás Szakmány
Author: Alex Warren
Author: Paul J. Young
Author: Kathryn M. Rowan
Author: David A. Harrison
Author: Paul R. Mouncey
Corporate Author: the UK-ROX Investigators

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