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Prone positioning of patients with moderate hypoxaemia due to covid-19: multicentre pragmatic randomised trial (COVID-PRONE)

Title: Prone positioning of patients with moderate hypoxaemia due to covid-19: multicentre pragmatic randomised trial (COVID-PRONE)
Authors: Fralick, Michael; Colacci, Michael; Munshi, Laveena; Venus, Kevin; Fidler, Lee; Hussein, Haseena; Britto, Karen; Fowler, Rob; da Costa, Bruno R; Dhalla, Irfan; Dunbar-Yaffe, Richard; Branfield Day, Leora; MacMillan, Thomas E; Zipursky, Jonathan; Carpenter, Travis; Tang, Terence; Cooke, Amanda; Hensel, Rachel; Bregger, Melissa; Gordon, Alexis; Worndl, Erin; Go, Stephanie; Mandelzweig, Keren; Castellucci, Lana A; Tamming, Daniel; Razak, Fahad; Verma, Amol A
Source: BMJ ; volume 376, page e068585 ; ISSN 1756-1833
Publisher Information: BMJ
Publication Year: 2022
Description: Objectives To assess the effectiveness of prone positioning to reduce the risk of death or respiratory failure in non-critically ill patients admitted to hospital with covid-19. Design Multicentre pragmatic randomised clinical trial. Setting 15 hospitals in Canada and the United States from May 2020 until May 2021. Participants Eligible patients had a laboratory confirmed or a clinically highly suspected diagnosis of covid-19, needed supplemental oxygen (up to 50% fraction of inspired oxygen), and were able to independently lie prone with verbal instruction. Of the 570 patients who were assessed for eligibility, 257 were randomised and 248 were included in the analysis. Intervention Patients were randomised 1:1 to prone positioning (that is, instructing a patient to lie on their stomach while they are in bed) or standard of care (that is, no instruction to adopt prone position). Main outcome measures The primary outcome was a composite of in-hospital death, mechanical ventilation, or worsening respiratory failure defined as needing at least 60% fraction of inspired oxygen for at least 24 hours. Secondary outcomes included the change in the ratio of oxygen saturation to fraction of inspired oxygen. Results The trial was stopped early on the basis of futility for the pre-specified primary outcome. The median time from hospital admission until randomisation was 1 day, the median age of patients was 56 (interquartile range 45-65) years, 89 (36%) patients were female, and 222 (90%) were receiving oxygen via nasal prongs at the time of randomisation. The median time spent prone in the first 72 hours was 6 (1.5-12.8) hours in total for the prone arm compared with 0 (0-2) hours in the control arm. The risk of the primary outcome was similar between the prone group (18 (14%) events) and the standard care group (17 (14%) events) (odds ratio 0.92, 95% confidence interval 0.44 to 1.92). The change in the ratio of oxygen saturation to fraction of inspired oxygen after 72 hours was similar for patients randomised to ...
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1136/bmj-2021-068585
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj-2021-068585; http://data.bmj.org/tdm/10.1136/bmj-2021-068585; https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/bmj-2021-068585
Rights: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Accession Number: edsbas.48E41DF0
Database: BASE