The ROX index (Respiratory rate and OXygenation) gives an indication of who is going to succeed or fail on HFOT and by doing so identify those who will need to escalate to mechanical ventilation, if failure is predicted. Not only does the prediction of HFOT failure in patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure improve clinical management and stratification of patients for optimal treatment [4], it can aid hospital workflow and bed management, as well as ensuring patient safety throughout their treatment.
The fact that there is a single, easy to calculate index looking at all these combined could aid the clinician to organise patients rather than wait to reach a stage where it is simply too late to intubate or escalate treatment. There is a downside to waiting too long to intubate a patient, which is why the ROX index was designed to help determine whether the patient is safe or should be intubated. [5]
This was calculated on a set of patients receiving a minimum of 30L of flow and 100% FiO2. They were aiming for O2 saturations > 92%. The study also found that the median duration of those who did well on HFOT was three days and those who did not do well, tolerated HFOT for about one day.
After Roca et al. carried out this study, they looked at the ROX index again and in 2019, carried out a prospective observational cohort study over 2 years this time[6]. The authors found that a ROX less than 2.85, less than 3.47, and less than 3.85 at 2, 6, and 12 hours of HFOT initiation respectively, were predictors of HFOT failure and that the ROX index was better than looking at SpO2/FiO2, RR, PaCO2, flow, SpO2, FiO2, and lactate to predict the need for mechanical ventilation; cementing further the need to use such an index.
Given that it is possible that HFOT failure could delay intubation and increase mortality [5], it is mandatory for these patients to be monitored in specifically designed physical spaces such as Respiratory Intermediate Care Units or the ICU, where healthcare personnel safety can also be optimised. [2]
HFOT is a well tolerated and comfortable, humidified non-invasive oxygen therapy delivering high flow rates of up to 80 l/min (depending on device) via nasal prongs. Delivering 37°c of flow with oxygen to deliver optimum comfort and humidification to the patient, the flow rates should be delivered and calculated based on patients’ inspiratory demand which HFNO should exceed.
HFOT can be used for break and weaning from CPAP as well as a standalone treatment. It can be used in ED, throughout acute respiratory wards, and through to critical care as necessary. It also has a growing space within the pre, peri and post operative space in theatres (respiratory support during procedural sedation, tubeless field surgery, obstetric anaesthesia and airway management in obese patients and difficult airway management) with the use of our Armstrong POINT system.
ARDS Definition Task Force, Ranieri, V. M., Rubenfeld, G. D., Thompson, B. T., Ferguson, N. D., Caldwell, E., Fan, E., Camporota, L., & Slutsky, A. S. (2012). Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. JAMA, 307(23), 2526–2533. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2012.5669
Gattinoni, L., Taccone, P., Carlesso, E., & Marini, J. J. (n.d.). Concise Clinical Review Prone Position in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Rationale, Indications, and Limits. https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.201308-1532CI
Griffiths, M., & Baudouin, S. (2018). GUIDELINES ON THE MANAGEMENT OF ACUTE RESPIRATORY DISTRESS SYNDROME. https://www.ficm.ac.uk/sites/default/files/ficm_ics_ards_guideline_-_july_2018.pdf
Guérin, C., Reignier, J., Richard, J.-C., Beuret, P., Gacouin, A., Boulain, T., Mercier, E., Badet, M., Mercat, A., Baudin, O., Clavel, M., Chatellier, D., Jaber, S., Rosselli, S., Mancebo, J., Sirodot, M., Hilbert, G., Bengler, C., Richecoeur, J., … Ayzac, L. (2013). Prone positioning in severe acute respiratory distress syndrome. The New England Journal of Medicine, 368(23), 2159–2168. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1214103
Tanaka, L. M. S., Azevedo, L. C. P., Park, M., Schettino, G., Nassar, A. P., Réa-Neto, A., Tannous, L., de Souza-Dantas, V. C., Torelly, A., Lisboa, T., Piras, C., Carvalho, F. B., de Oliveira Maia, M., Giannini, F. P., Machado, F. R., Dal-Pizzol, F., de Carvalho, A. G. R., Dos Santos, R. B., Tierno, P. F. G. M. M., … Salluh, J. I. F. (2014). Early sedation and clinical outcomes of mechanically ventilated patients: a prospective multicenter cohort study. Critical Care (London, England), 18(4), R156. https://doi.org/10.1186/cc13995
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