Appropriateness of Emergency Intubation and Its Clinical Outcome: A Prospective Audit of a Local Hospital in Malaysia-Juniper Publishers
JUNIPER PUBLISHERS-OPEN ACCESS INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PULMONARY & RESPIRATORY SCIENCES
Abstract
Background: Intubation to provide ventilatory
support in any patient is a serious decision. Inappropriate intubation
is harmful and costly to healthcare.
Methods: A prospective audit to evaluate
whether emergency intubation decisions were appropriate in medical
patients of a state general hospital was conducted. All eligible cases
were consecutively recruited and followed up for 3 months. Surgical and
cardiac cases were excluded.The specialist physician and anaesthetist in
charge judged whether the emergency intubation was appropriate based on
disease reversibility, premorbid status and ethical consideration. The
intubation was considered inappropriate if either one judged so.
Results: 105 cases were audited [70 males;
mean age (range) 59(28 to 86) yrs]. 52.3% had sepsis and 48.5% had
pneumonia as cause for intubation. 16(17.9%) patients were
inappropriately intubated. None of the inappropriately intubated
survived in 3 months while 34(38.8%) of appropriately ventilated cases
did. Multivariate logistic regression showed that inappropriate
intubation was associated with on-call working shift and non-ICU care
while mortality was associated with age, total SOFA score and non-ICU
care. Inappropriate ventilation was associated with reduced probability
of survival (log-rank test, p<0.001) but not so when adjusted with
age, SOFA score and non-ICU care (Adjusted HR 1.33;0. 68-2.61; p=0.39).
Conclusion: A significant proportion of
emergency intubations was inappropriate and had poor outcomes. Our audit
results identify several issues for intervention and reiterate that the
decision to intubate patients must be carefully weighed.
Keywords: Emergency intubation; Cardio-respiratory arrest; Decision; Appropriateness; Malaysia
Introduction
Intubation to provide assisted ventilation is a
serious decision. It is an invasive procedure and the ensuing mechanical
ventilation is intensive and costly from the perspectives of medical
and nursing care [1].
Intubated patients are normally managed in intensive care unit (ICU).
In some hospitals in Malaysia, the shortage of ICU beds has led to the
situation where the emergency intubated patients have to be temporarily
managed in general medical wards. They are however continued to be cared
for in a high-dependency manner by both the physicians and
anaesthetists. One reason noted for the constantly full occupancy of ICU
beds with patients consequently managed outside ICU is that too many
patients are being considered for intubation. This scenario is
apparently common in many public hospitals in Malaysia but the exact
statistics are not available. There are also anecdotal reports of such
occurrence in hospitals among resource-poor areas of other low-to-medium
income countries. The reason for the lack of such statistics may be due
to the sensitive nature of such information. The low threshold for
emergency intubation in our hospital needs to be investigated. In a
prospective clinical audit, we examined all consecutive medical cases
that had emergency intubation in our hospital were appropriate. We also
evaluated factors associated on this appropriateness on emergency
intubation and the clinical outcomes of mortality and length of hospital
stay.
Patients and Methods
Study design
All consecutive medical patients who had emergency
intubation in a large 1200-bed urban-based state general hospital
(Penang Hospital, Penang) was audited within two working days of
intubation. The audit cases were recruited from June to August 2013
(three months) and followed up until three months from the date of
intubation. For the purpose of this audit, we excluded surgical and
cardiac cases since the causes of intubation are usually obvious and
warranted. Only intubation carried out as a medical emergency was
considered for the audit. During these emergencies, the decision to
intubate was made by the physician team (who might be consultant,
specialist or medical officer) who looked after these patients during
working hours or the medical officer on-call during off- working hours.
Anaesthetist colleagues (either during working or off-working hours)
were usually asked to assist to perform intubation. This audit was
jointly conducted by Department of Medicine, Department of Respiratory
Medicine, Critical Care and Anaesthesiology Department, Penang Hospital
and Department of Medicine, Penang Medical College, Penang.
Data collection and judgment on "appropriateness” of intubation
Data was collected using standardized questionnaire
that included all relevant demographic, clinical and healthcare process
details (e.g. normal or on-call hours). The "appropriateness" of
intubation was based on the judgement by the in-charge
specialist/consultant physician and the in-charge specialist/consultant
anaesthetist obtained from face-to-face interview by the investigators
(EKO, JCEO, SSMC) within two working days from the time of intubation.
The in-charged specialist/ consultant might or might not be the person
who decided on the emergency intubation. The judgment was based on the
three criteria of disease reversibility, premorbid status and ethical
consideration. The two judges were interviewed independent from each
other. The case was judged inappropriate if either one of the two senior
doctors considered so. All cases were followed up for three months
until death or discharge.
Audit standard
We arbitrarily set the audit standard of acceptable
rate for "inappropriate" intubation at 10% given the difficulty and the
sensitive nature of such decision for the deciding doctors.
Statistical analysis
Categorical and continuous data are analyzed by Chi
Square and t-tests respectively. Variables with p value < 0.05 are
included into univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis
to calculate crude and adjusted odd ratios for associations with
'inappropriate' intubation and mortality. Hosmer-Lemeshow test is used
to ensure the variables fit the model. Kaplan-Meier curve is used to
show association between length of hospital stay and 'inappropriate'
intubation, and their associations are analyzed using log-rank test and
Cox-proportional hazards model. Test of proportional hazards assumption
is used to ensure the variables fit the model. A p value < 0.05 is
considered statistically significant.
Results

A total of 105 patients [mean age 59 yrs (range 28 to
86); 66% male] were audited and all follow-ups were complete. Over half
were Chinese and near a quarter were Malay. 52.3% had sepsis and 48.5%
had pneumonia as cause for intubation. Their premorbid medical
conditions, whether respiratory or non-respiratory, were not
significantly different between those appropriately and inappropriately
intubated (data not shown). Sixteen (17.9%) patients were
inappropriately intubated. The highest proportion of the inappropriately
intubated cases (37%) occurred in the neurology/endocrine ward (this is
a shared ward between the two specialties) while the highest proportion
of the appropriately intubated cases (33%) occurred in Accident &
Emergency (A & E) Department. None of the inappropriately intubated
survived in 3 months while 34 (38.8%) of appropriately ventilated cases
did (Figure 1).
Association with "inappropriate” group

Figures shown are number (percentage) unless otherwise specified
*Comparing ‘Inappropriate' vs. ‘appropriate' groups;
SOFA: Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment Score

*Comparing ‘Inappropriate' vs. ‘appropriate' groups;
**General Medicine (including infectious disease, rheumatology, gastroenterology)
***Included surgical, hematological wards
# This is a shared ward between the two specialties
A & E: Accident & Emergency Ward; ICU: Intensive Care Unit

*Variables included for adjustment are age group, on-call shift and non-ICU care.
"Inappropriate" group was significantly older than the "appropriate" group (Table 1).
Proportionately more "inappropriate" group occurred during on-call
hours compared to normal working hours and were managed in non-ICU wards
compared to ICU (Table 2).
In logistic regression analysis, increasing age was associated with the
likelihood of being in 'inappropriate' group but not so after adjusting
for on-call hours and non-ICU care. On-call hours and non-ICU care were
8 and 26 times more likely to be associated with 'inappropriate' group
respectively. These likelihoods increased further to 14 and 36 times
after adjusting for age and each other. The 95% confidence levels for
both however were very wide, suggesting a wide variability between cases
(Table 3).
Association with hospital mortality

Figures shown are number (percentage) unless otherwise specified
*comparing ‘survival' vs. ‘dead' groups;
SOFA: Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment Score

Figures shown are number (percentage) unless otherwise specified
*comparing 'survival' vs. 'dead' groups;
**General Medicine (including infectious disease, rheumatology, gastroenterology)
***Included surgical, hematological wards
A & E: Accident & Emergency Ward; ICU: Intensive Care Unit

SOFA: Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment
*Variables included for adjustment are age group,
total SOFA scoreand non-ICU care. Deciding department and
“inappropriate” intubation group are not included.
Mortality group was significantly older than those
who lived. Mean total score for Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessment
(SOFA) was significantly higher in mortality group compared to survival
group (Table 4).
The difference in departments (who decided to intubate) and whether it
was ICU or non-ICU care were statistically significant between the two
groups (Table 5 & 6).
In logistic regression analysis, increasing age, raising total SOFA
score and non-ICU care were significantly associated with likelihood of
mortality, but not deciding department. These associations remained
independently association with mortality after adjusting for age and one
another. The odd ratios changed little with or without adjustment,
suggesting that they were highly independent from one another. The odd
ratio for non- ICU care is much higher than age or total SOFA score.
Kaplan Meier survival estimates showed that "inappropriate" group was
significantly associated with reduced days to mortality (log rank
p<0.001). This association is not significant when adjusted with age,
total SOFA score and non-ICU care [adjusted Hazard Ratio (95% CI): 1.33
(0.68 to 2.61); p=0.39].
Discussion
Our audit showed that there was a higher than 10%
rate (our arbitrary audit cut-off point) of inappropriately intubated
emergency cases in our hospital. Significantly more cases occurred
during on-call hours and were managed in non-ICU setting compared to
those appropriately intubated. Mortality within three months were
associated with older age, those who were critically more ill as
reflected by total SOFA score and with non-ICU care. Inappropriate
intubation increased the probability of death by survival estimates. The
increase however was not significant after adjusting for total SOFA
score, age and non-ICU care.
To our knowledge, this is the first ever published
audit on this issue. The judgment of whether intubation was appropriate
was considered strict and was generally independent from the doctor who
decided on the emergency intubation. While the general principles on
consideration for intubation are well established, doctors including
consultants can still disagree on individual cases [2].-
This indicates that the decision to intubate or not is never an overtly
straightforward one. The highest proportion of inappropriately
intubated cases occurred in endocrine/neurology ward. Further data
analysis revealed that they were mostly neurological cases rather than
endocrine cases. This may suggest that neurological cases encountered a
more difficult decision on the issue of emergency intubation in general
or possibly reluctance to commit on such issue. This audit finding had
been discussed and conveyed to the relevant physicians in charge.
The finding that more inappropriately intubated cases
had occurred during on-call hours had raised the important issue of
whether on-call doctors had a lower threshold of intubating patients
rightly or wrongly. It is obviously a more difficult decision to call
off intubation during a respiratory arrest of a patient who is normally
not cared for by the on-call doctors. The medically correct decision is
to proceed to intubate if in doubt since saving life is the obvious
priority. The decision is a sensitive one with the patient's family and
has medico-legal consequences [3].
Our audit finding also raises the issue of whether
the managing doctors had made proper documentation of "not-
for-resuscitation" (DNR) order and whether such message had been
properly "handover" to on-call doctors if such decision was made. The
importance and practice of proper clinical handover between clinicians
and medical documentation is not new and has been emphasized in many
clinical guidelines over the years [4,5]. Despite this, many sites still show significant lapses of such practice till today [6]. The reality is that DNR orders are difficult and complex decisions [7], and that many doctors are uncomfortable discussing about DNR decisions with patients and families [8]. It is highly likely that our doctors faced the same struggle.
Non-ICU care of intubated patients was significantly
associated with both "inappropriate" intubation and hospital mortality.
Importantly, the confidence levels of the adjusted odd ratio for both
these variables are very wide, suggesting that the variability of
probabilities is huge. Our audit showed that significantly more patients
who were appropriately ventilated were subsequently transferred into
ICU from the initial site of intubation (either A & E or general
ward) than those inappropriately ventilated (40% vs. 6%). This indicated
that there was an active selection process of cases to be treated in
ICU. This active selection was very likely to have contributed to our
audit findings of increased mortality and "inappropriate" intubation
among the non-ICU cases. The interpretation of our findings must take
this into account. Since "inappropriate" intubation cases were judged as
poor premorbid status and disease reversibility, these non-ICU cases
were likely those with poorer clinical prognosis and high mortality
risk.
The practice of managing intubated patients in
non-ICU setting is a pragmatic but practical solution to the frequent
crisis of ICU bed shortage in Malaysia. Apparently, such practice also
is also known to occur elsewhere from personal communications.Although
non-invasive ventilation can be executed outside ICU to some success [9],
invasive ventilation outside ICU is generally not accepted as the
standard care of practice because of its high level of nursing care. The
non-ICU care is intended as a temporary measure while waiting for ICU
bed to be available. In our hospital, they are conducted in a
high-dependency manner near to nurses' station and cared for by ward
physicians as well as anaesthetists from ICU. The incidence of such
cases can be minimized if we are more effective in selection of
appropriate cases for intubation.
In short, our audit has identified several potential
areas to intervene in order to reduce the incidence of inappropriate
intubation. To date, we had several discussions between departments on
the audit findings and had implemented some action plans. However doctor
education, departmental cooperation and the vigilance of intubation
practice must be on-going to ensure that inappropriate intubation is
kept to a minimum and that ICU beds are freed up to service our
healthcare system. Plans for re-auditing this are being discussed.
Acknowledgment
The authors wish to thank the Penang Hospital
Director and Director-General, Ministry of Health Malaysia for the
support of this audit.
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