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Tracheostomy is a very common surgical procedure performed in critically ill patients on invasive mechanical ventilation, and usually performed in difficult-to-wean patients and whn prolonged mechanical ventilation is required.
Weaning from the tracheostomy cannula (i.e. decannulation) represents one of the crucial steps in the post-acute respiratory management of these patients. Tracheostomy literature mainly focuses on the timing and technique of this procedure, but there is a lack of studies about decannulation and, currently, our knowledge is primarily based on expert opinion. The COVID-19 pandemic, due to the rapid increase in the number of patients exposed to prolonged mechanical ventilation, has stressed the need for objective parameters and shared standardized protocols to perform weaning from tracheostomy.
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The study will have two co-primary objectives:
The investigators will retrospectively collect data from patients who underwent a tracheostomy procedure and decannulation during their hospital stay since January 2017 until November 2021.
A digital dataset will be shared with the participating centers. The following variables will be collected: age, gender, comorbidities, reason and date of tracheostomy, technique used, type of cannula, variables associated with the weaning process (timing and type of caliber reduction, tube capping, assessment of airway patency by means of fiberoptic bronchoscopy, effectiveness of cough and swallowing, type and timing of change in respiratory support), level of consciousness, vital signs, arterial blood gas analysis and blood tests before and after decannulation, failure of decannulation and related complications. The dataset will be also designed to retrospectively validate the QsQ score, which is based on two main criteria (or quantitative parameters) and eight minor criteria (or semi-quantitative parameters).
Inclusion criteria
1. Patients with surgical/permanent tracheostomy (e.g. neuromuscular disorders needing long-term invasive mechanical ventilation) 2. Patients that underwent elective tracheostomy due to neck masses or tumors, in view of a surgical approach 3. Patients tracheostomized more than once
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192 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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