Journal article

Higher versus lower nasal continuous positive airway pressure for extubation of extremely preterm infants in Australia (ÉCLAT): a multicentre, randomised, superiority trial

Anna M Kidman, Brett J Manley, Rosemarie A Boland, Atul Malhotra, Susan M Donath, Friederike Beker, Peter G Davis, Risha Bhatia

The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health | Elsevier | Published : 2023

Abstract

Background: Extremely preterm infants often require invasive mechanical ventilation, and clinicians aim to extubate these infants as soon as possible. However, extubation failure occurs in up to 60% of extremely preterm infants and is associated with increased mortality and morbidity. Nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) is the most common post-extubation respiratory support, but there is no consensus on the optimal nCPAP level to safely avoid extubation failure in extremely preterm infants. We aimed to determine if higher nCPAP levels compared with standard nCPAP levels would decrease rates of extubation failure in extremely preterm infants within 7 days of their first extubati..

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Grants

Awarded by Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Centre for Research Excellence in Newborn Medicine


Funding Acknowledgements

<B>Acknowledgments</B> This study was funded by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Centre for Research Excellence in Newborn Medicine (1153176) . We thank the participating infants and their families, research nurses and clinicians at all sites and the Data Safety and Monitoring Board (Dr Christopher JD McKinlay, Dr Antonio De Paoli, and Dr Anurika De Silva) .