This is unpublished
Research
News

Drs. Latimer and Mitchell Co-Author Study Published in New England Journal of Medicine

July 12, 2023
News Spotlight Image 2
Mitchell
Latimer
Pinned
Back to top

LatimerMitchellDrs. Andrew Latimer and Steve Mitchell are co-authors of a recently published study that looks at whether video laryngoscopy as compared with direct laryngoscopy increases the likelihood of successful tracheal intubation on the first attempt among critically ill adults.

The study, funded by the U.S. Department of Defense and published in The New England Journal of Medicine, used a multicenter, randomized trial conducted at 17 emergency departments and intensive care units. The team randomly assigned critically ill adults undergoing tracheal intubation to the video-laryngoscope group or the direct-laryngoscope group.

According to the study, the primary outcome was successful intubation on the first attempt. The secondary outcome was the occurrence of severe complications during intubation; severe complications were defined as severe hypoxemia, severe hypotension, new or increased vasopressor use, cardiac arrest, or death.

RESULTS:
The trial was stopped for efficacy at the time of the single preplanned interim analysis. Among 1417 patients who were included in the final analysis (91.5% of whom underwent intubation that was performed by an emergency medicine resident or a critical care fellow), successful intubation on the first attempt occurred in 600 of the 705 patients (85.1%) in the video-laryngoscope group and in 504 of the 712 patients (70.8%) in the direct-laryngoscope group (absolute risk difference, 14.3 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI], 9.9 to 18.7; P<0.001). A total of 151 patients (21.4%) in the video-laryngoscope group and 149 patients (20.9%) in the direct-laryngoscope group had a severe complication during intubation (absolute risk difference, 0.5 percentage points; 95% CI, −3.9 to 4.9). Safety outcomes, including esophageal intubation, injury to the teeth, and aspiration, were similar in the two groups.

CONCLUSIONS: 
Among critically ill adults undergoing tracheal intubation in an emergency department or ICU, the use of a video laryngoscope resulted in a higher incidence of successful intubation on the first attempt than the use of a direct laryngoscope. (Funded by the U.S. Department of Defense; DEVICE ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT05239195.)

News Categories

Recent News

Stock photo of an ambulance
3 days ago
UW researchers develop innovative solution for prehospital h…
Dr. White
Dr. Alex St. John
Suzie H. Pun
WA-CEP Logo
1 month ago
Dr. Lu receives 2024 WA-ACEP Wellness Award
Dr. Dave Lu
Stock photo of buprenorphine treatment bottle
1 month 1 week ago
New treatment resources rolled out as opioid overdoses incre…
Dr. Chris Buresh Headshot