Guest guest Posted November 8, 2002 Report Share Posted November 8, 2002 Hi Amy, here are more articles from Joanne Schum about the subject. I haven't read them yet myself, but hope they fit to the one I sent before. Peace Torsten Secretion Clearance Techniques: Absence of Proof or Proof of Absence? Healthy lungs clear mucus from the airways via the mucociliary escalator. When the mucociliary escalator is challenged in disease, secretions are cleared with the cough reflex. Acute and chronic respiratory diseases are commonly associated with increased respiratory secretions due to increased mucus production, impaired mucociliary transport, or a weak cough. However, it is unknown whether increased respiratory secretions contribute to the deterioration of respiratory function, or whether this is merely a symptom associated with the progression of the disease. Moreover, increased mucus expectoration does not necessarily imply mucus stasis in the airways. Clinicians and patients are troubled by respiratory secretions, and standard practice calls for efforts to clear these from the lungs. An important proportion of respiratory therapists' time is spent in efforts to remove secretions from the lower respiratory tract. For patients with diseases such as cystic fibrosis a great deal of each day can be spent using techniques designed to enhance secretion clearance. In recent years a variety of techniques for secretion clearance have become available. Many of these techniques are described in this issue of RESPIRATORY CARE. Despite clinical enthusiasm for many of these by both clinicians and patients, there is sparse high-level evidence demonstrating benefit from many of these techniques. As pointed out by others1-14 and me,15 there are a number of methodologic limitations of published reports of secretion clearance techniques. Most studies are small and use crossover designs (rather than randomized parallel designs). Sham therapy was not used in most studies -- often one technique was compared to another (for example, chest physiotherapy vs positive expiratory pressure). Many studies were limited to short-term outcomes such as sputum clearance with a single treatment session. It might be argued that short-term outcomes are irrelevant and that the focus should be on long-term outcomes such as disease progression, quality of life, and patient satisfaction. Conducting a methodologically strong study (ie, placebo-controlled prospective randomized trial) with an adequate sample size and important outcomes (eg, disease progression, morbidity, mortality) is difficult. Such a study would be expensive and industrial support is not likely. Moreover, secretion clearance is an integral component of disease management for patients with increased sputum production, raising serious ethical concerns about placebo-controlled studies. I have always found it intriguing that a new drug to improve secretion clearance must pass through the usual Phase 1 through Phase 3 approval process, whereas a new device is not subjected to the same scrutiny. Is absence of proof the same as proof of absence? Does the lack of evidence mean lack of benefit? Is the lack of evidence due to study methodology, or is there really no benefit from many techniques used to enhance secretion clearance? Although we should not be dogmatic about endorsing a therapy with absence of proof of its benefit, we must also not be dogmatic about abandoning a therapy because of absence of proof of its benefit -- absence of proof is not proof of absence. In fact, from a methodological and statistical standpoint, absence of proof is very difficult to prove. Given a lack of evidence, I suggest the following clinical hierarchy of questions when considering secretion clearance therapy for a patient. 1. Is there a pathophysiologic rational for use of the therapy? Is the patient experiencing difficulty clearing secretions? Are retained secretions affecting lung function in an important way, such as gas exchange or lung mechanics? Remember that the production of large amounts of sputum does not necessarily mean that the patient is experiencing difficulty clearing sputum. 2. What is the potential for adverse effects from the therapy? Which therapy is likely to provide the greatest benefit with the least harm? 3. What is the cost of the equipment for this therapy? Some devices are very expensive. 4. What are the preferences of the patient? Lacking evidence that any technique is superior to another, patient preference is an important consideration. When a decision is made to try a secretion clearance technique, an n- of-1 trial can be conducted.16-18 For example, imagine that a decision is made to try positive expiratory pressure therapy for a patient with cystic fibrosis. The clinician and patient agree that a clinically useful outcome measure is sputum production. A 12-week trial is designed. For 1 week, the only sputum clearance technique used is huff coughing. For a second week, positive expiratory pressure (in addition to huff coughing) is used, as provided by the manufacturer. For a third week, the positive expiratory pressure device is used with pressure set at such a low level that it is probably sub-therapeutic (sham therapy). The patient is naive to the therapy and does not know whether the device should be used with or without the high-pressure setting. The order of treatments is randomized (the patient flips a coin) and the sequence is repeated 4 times. Each day, the sputum produced during the therapy session is weighed. A diary is also kept, in which events such as chest infections are logged. At the end of 12 weeks the results are analyzed (this may include statistical analysis), reviewed together by the clinician and patient, and a collaborative decision is made regarding the benefit of the therapy. In this manner an objective decision is made regarding the benefits of the therapy for this individual patient. Despite the clinical observation that retained secretions are detrimental to respiratory function and despite anecdotal associations between secretion clearance and improvements in respiratory function, there is a dearth of high-level evidence to support any secretion clearance technique. This is problematic, given that secretion clearance is an important aspect of respiratory care practice. Although lack of evidence does not mean lack of benefit, it is desirable to have better evidence to support the practice. Appropriately powered and methodologically sound research is desperately needed. This provides an opportunity for respiratory therapists to conduct research on a very important aspect of our practice. For the effective therapy of our patients and for the efficient use of health care resources, it is incumbent upon us to improve the scientific basis for secretion clearance techniques. Dean R Hess PhD RRT FAARC Department of Respiratory Care Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts New Horizons in Respiratory Care: Airway Clearance Techniques It was an honor to co-chair the 17th Annual New Horizons Symposium at the American Association for Respiratory Care's International Respiratory Congress in San , Texas, on December 2, 2001. The New Horizons Symposium has been a landmark feature of the meeting for 17 years. This full-afternoon session provides a comprehensive, focused, and multi-dimensional exploration of a key aspect of the practice of respiratory care, usually reviewing areas of evolving clinical practice. In many instances the manuscripts from the symposium are then published in a special issue of RESPIRATORY CARE. Airway mucus is a critically important host defense. Normal mechanisms for mobilization of secretions include mucociliary transport, autocephalad flow (secretions moving toward the central airway during normal breathing), and cough. Mucus hypersecretion and impaired mucus clearance can be serious problems, leading to discomfort, dyspnea, airway obstruction, atelectasis, infection, bronchiectasis, and pulmonary disability. As respiratory care has evolved as a profession, airway secretion clearance has always been part of our scope of practice.1-4 Terms such as " bronchial hygiene " and " pulmonary toilet " have been used to characterize the process of assisting patients to clear airway secretions. Too often, however, those terms have been associated only with postural drainage, percussion and vibration, or mechanical aspiration of the airways in acutely ill patients. Over the past 40 years we have come to better understand the mechanisms of airway clearance in health and disease, and this has led to the development of devices and techniques to assist in secretion removal. The amount and quality of evidence from rigorously conducted, randomized clinical trials in support of these diverse techniques varies widely.5 However, most of the techniques are based on physiologic rationale and are at least supported by case studies.2 This year's New Horizons Symposium began with a review of the " Physiology of Airway Mucus Clearance " (Bruce Rubin). The major bronchial hygiene techniques were reviewed in " Positioning Versus Postural Drainage " (Jim Fink), " Airway Physiology, Autogenic Drainage, and Active Cycle of Breathing " (Craig Lapin), " Positive Pressure Techniques " (Jim Fink), and " High-Frequency Oscillation of the Airway and Chest Wall " (Mike Mahlmeister and Jim Fink). Kathy son discussed " Airway Clearance Strategies for the Pediatric Patient " and presented strategies for introducing these techniques as the patient develops from infancy through to adulthood. then reviewed key practice considerations for the intubated patient in or out of the intensive care unit in " Airway Clearance Techniques for the Patient with an Artificial Airway. " Dr Rubin's review of " The Pharmacologic Approach to Airway Clearance: Mucoactive Agents " then summarized the state of the art for medical management of secretion retention. As we concluded the symposium it was clear that we had not addressed one potentially valuable method of airway clearance: ultra-low-frequency airway oscillation, better known as the Insufflator/Exsufflator (Fig. 1). This device has been studied for more than 50 years. Evidence suggests that it is an effective method to assist airway clearance in debilitated patients or in those with severe neuromuscular weakness. The symposium participants agreed that although there may be few data to unequivocally support the use of many of these techniques, there is strong observational evidence that suggest that many of these techniques can have a role in mobilizing secretions, reducing dyspnea, and helping patients maintain patent airways. Selection of a " best " technique is currently more of an art than a science and depends greatly on the patient's underlying condition, level of functioning and understanding, and ability and willingness to perform the technique and integrate it into normal daily routines. For the clinician, the decision diagrams in Figure 2 represent one approach for technique selection. Education is key to the success of any technique. The better a patient understands a technique the better chance the patient has of adopting it appropriately. Future research needs to better define and refine techniques in use and to incorporate good study designs in well-powered clinical trials that use meaningful outcomes. As an example, although often measured, the volume of expectorated sputum is of limited or no value in determining the clinical effectiveness of these devices and techniques. Measuring the frequency of protocol-defined exacerbations, antibiotic use, unplanned physician visits, hospitalizations, or missed days of work or school appears to be of greater clinical and scientific relevance. The more that we as a profession invest in learning, teaching, and studying these techniques, the greater the chance that our patients can benefit from their use. B Fink MSc RRT FAARC Fellow, Respiratory Science Aerogen Incorporated San Francisco, California Bruce K Rubin MEngr MD FAARC Department of Pediatrics Wake Forest University School of Medicine Winston-Salem, North Carolina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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