Special Report: As virus advances, doctors rethink rush to ventilate
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[April 23, 2020]
By Silvia Aloisi, Deena Beasley, Gabriella Borter, Thomas Escritt
and Kate Kelland
BERLIN (Reuters) - When he was diagnosed
with COVID-19, Andre Bergmann knew exactly where he wanted to be
treated: the Bethanien hospital lung clinic in Moers, near his home in
northwestern Germany.
The clinic is known for its reluctance to put patients with breathing
difficulties on mechanical ventilators - the kind that involve tubes
down the throat.
The 48-year-old physician, father of two and aspiring triathlete worried
that an invasive ventilator would be harmful. But soon after entering
the clinic, Bergmann said, he struggled to breathe even with an oxygen
mask, and felt so sick the ventilator seemed inevitable.
Even so, his doctors never put him on a machine that would breathe for
him. A week later, he was well enough to go home.
Bergmann's case illustrates a shift on the front lines of the COVID-19
pandemic, as doctors rethink when and how to use mechanical ventilators
to treat severe sufferers of the disease - and in some cases whether to
use them at all. While initially doctors packed intensive care units
with intubated patients, now many are exploring other options.
Machines to help people breathe have become the major weapon for medics
fighting COVID-19, which has so far killed more than 183,000 people.
Within weeks of the disease's global emergence in February, governments
around the world raced to build or buy ventilators as most hospitals
said they were in critically short supply.
Germany has ordered 10,000 of them. Engineers from Britain to Uruguay
are developing versions based on autos, vacuum cleaners or even
windshield-wiper motors. U.S. President Donald Trump's administration is
spending $2.9 billion for nearly 190,000 ventilators. The U.S.
government has contracted with automakers such as General Motors Co and
Ford Motor Co as well as medical device manufacturers, and full delivery
is expected by the end of the year. Trump declared this week that the
U.S. was now "the king of ventilators."
However, as doctors get a better understanding of what COVID-19 does to
the body, many say they have become more sparing with the equipment.
Reuters interviewed 30 doctors and medical professionals in countries
including China, Italy, Spain, Germany and the United States, who have
experience of dealing with COVID-19 patients. Nearly all agreed that
ventilators are vitally important and have helped save lives. At the
same time, many highlighted the risks from using the most invasive types
of them - mechanical ventilators - too early or too frequently, or from
non-specialists using them without proper training in overwhelmed
hospitals.
Medical procedures have evolved in the pandemic as doctors better
understand the disease, including the types of drugs used in treatments.
The shift around ventilators has potentially far-reaching implications
as countries and companies ramp up production of the devices.
"BETTER RESULTS"
Many forms of ventilation use masks to help get oxygen into the lungs.
Doctors' main concern is around mechanical ventilation, which involves
putting tubes into patients' airways to pump air in, a process known as
intubation. Patients are heavily sedated, to stop their respiratory
muscles from fighting the machine.
Those with severe oxygen shortages, or hypoxia, have generally been
intubated and hooked up to a ventilator for up to two to three weeks,
with at best a fifty-fifty chance of surviving, according to doctors
interviewed by Reuters and recent medical research. The picture is
partial and evolving, but it suggests people with COVID-19 who have been
intubated have had, at least in the early stages of the pandemic, a
higher rate of death than other patients on ventilators who have
conditions such as bacterial pneumonia or collapsed lungs.
This is not proof that ventilators have hastened death: The link between
intubation and death rates needs further study, doctors say.
In China, 86% of 22 COVID-19 patients didn't survive invasive
ventilation at an intensive care unit in Wuhan, the city where the
pandemic began, according to a study published in The Lancet in
February. Normally, the paper said, patients with severe breathing
problems have a 50% chance of survival. A recent British study found
two-thirds of COVID-19 patients put on mechanical ventilators ended up
dying anyway, and a New York study found 88% of 320 mechanically
ventilated COVID-19 patients had died.
More recently, none of the eight patients who went on ventilators at the
Abu Dhabi hospital had died as of April 9, a doctor there told Reuters.
And one ICU doctor at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta said he had
had a "good" week when almost half the COVID-19 patients were
successfully taken off the ventilator, when he had expected more to die.
The experiences can vary dramatically. The average time a COVID-19
patient spent on a ventilator at Scripps Health's five hospitals in
California's San Diego County was just over a week, compared with two
weeks at the Hadassah Ein Kerem Medical Center in Jerusalem and three at
the Universiti Malaya Medical Centre in the Malaysian capital Kuala
Lumpur, medics at the hospitals said.
In Germany, as patient Bergmann struggled to breathe, he said he was
getting too desperate to care.
"There came a moment when it simply no longer mattered," he told
Reuters. "At one point I was so exhausted that I asked my doctor if I
was going to get better. I was saying, if I had no children or partner
then it would be easier just to be left in peace."
Instead of putting Bergmann on a mechanical ventilator, the clinic gave
him morphine and kept him on the oxygen mask. He's since tested free of
the infection, but not fully recovered. The head of the clinic, Thomas
Voshaar, a German pulmonologist, has argued strongly against early
intubation of COVID-19 patients. Doctors including Voshaar worry about
the risk that ventilators will damage patients' lungs.
The doctors interviewed by Reuters agreed that mechanical ventilators
are crucial life-saving devices, especially in severe cases when
patients suddenly deteriorate. This happens to some when their immune
systems go into overdrive in what is known as a "cytokine storm" of
inflammation that can cause dangerously high blood pressure, lung damage
and eventual organ failure.
The new coronavirus and COVID-19, the disease the virus causes, have
been compared to the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918-19, which killed 50
million people worldwide. Now as then, the disease is novel, severe and
spreading rapidly, pushing the limits of the public health and medical
knowledge required to tackle it.
When coronavirus cases started surging in Louisiana, doctors at the
state's largest hospital system, Ochsner Health, saw an influx of people
with signs of acute respiratory distress syndrome, or ARDS. Patients
with ARDS have inflammation in the lungs which can cause them to
struggle to breathe and take rapid short breaths.
"Initially we were intubating fairly quickly on these patients as they
began to have more respiratory distress," said Robert Hart, the hospital
system's chief medical officer. "Over time what we learned is trying not
to do that."
Instead, Hart's hospital tried other forms of ventilation using masks or
thin nasal tubes, as Voshaar did with his German patient. "We seem to be
seeing better results," Hart said.
CHANGED LUNGS
Other doctors painted a similar picture.
In Wuhan, where the novel coronavirus emerged, doctors at Tongji
Hospital at the Huazhong University of Science and Technology said they
initially turned quickly to intubation. Li Shusheng, head of the
hospital's intensive care department, said a number of patients did not
improve after ventilator treatment.
"The disease," he explained, "had changed their lungs beyond our
imagination." His colleague Xu Shuyun, a doctor of respiratory medicine,
said the hospital adapted by cutting back on intubation.
Luciano Gattinoni, a guest professor at the Department of
Anaesthesiology, Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine, University of
Göttingen in Germany, and a renowned expert in ventilators, was one of
the first to raise questions about how they should be used to treat
COVID-19.
"I realised as soon as I saw the first CT scan ... that this had nothing
to do with what we had seen and done for the past 40 years," he told
Reuters.
In a paper published by the American Thoracic Society on March 30,
Gattinoni and other Italian doctors wrote that COVID-19 does not lead to
"typical" respiratory problems. Patients' lungs were working better than
they would expect for ARDS, they wrote - they were more elastic. So, he
said, mechanical ventilation should be given "with a lower pressure than
the one we are used to."
Ventilating some COVID-19 sufferers as if they were standard patients
with ARDS is not appropriate, he told Reuters. "It's like using a
Ferrari to go to the shop next door, you press on the accelerator and
you smash the window."
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Marcelo Larrosa demonstrates the use of a ventilator powered by a
motor modeled after a windshield wiper motor, in Montevideo, Uruguay
April 9, 2020. REUTERS/Mariana Greif/File Photo
The Italians were swiftly followed by Cameron Kyle-Sidell, a New
York physician who put out a talk on YouTube saying that by
preparing to put patients on ventilators, hospitals in America were
treating "the wrong disease." Ventilation, he feared, would lead to
"a tremendous amount of harm to a great number of people in a very
short time." This remains his view, he told Reuters this week.
When Spain's outbreak erupted in mid-March, many patients went
straight onto ventilators because lung X-rays and other test results
"scared us," said Delia Torres, a physician at the Hospital General
Universitario de Alicante. They now focus more on breathing and a
patient's overall condition than just X-rays and tests. And they
intubate less. "If the patient can get better without it, then
there's no need," she said.
In Germany, lung specialist Voshaar was also concerned. A mechanical
ventilator itself can damage the lungs, he says. This means patients
stay in intensive care longer, blocking specialist beds and creating
a vicious circle in which ever more ventilators are needed.
Of the 36 acute COVID-19 patients on his ward in mid-April, Voshaar
said, one had been intubated - a man with a serious neuro-muscular
disorder - and he was the only patient to die. Another 31 had
recovered.
"IRON LUNGS"
Some doctors cautioned that the impression that the rush to
ventilate is harmful may be partly due to the sheer numbers of
patients in today's pandemic.
People working in intensive care units know that the mortality rate
of ARDS patients who are intubated is around 40%, said Thierry
Fumeaux, head of an ICU in Nyon, Switzerland, and president of the
Swiss Intensive Care Medicine Society. That is high, but may be
acceptable in normal times, when there are three or four patients in
a unit and one of them doesn't make it.
"When you have 20 patients or more, this becomes very evident," said
Fumeaux. "So you have this feeling - and I've heard this a lot -
that ventilation kills the patient." That's not the case, he said.
"No, it's not the ventilation that kills the patient, it's the lung
disease."
Mario Riccio, head of anaesthesiology and resuscitation at the Oglio
Po hospital near Cremona in Lombardy, Italy's worst-hit region, says
the machines are the only treatment to save a COVID-19 patient in
serious condition. "The fact that people who were placed under
mechanical ventilation in some cases die does not undermine this
statement."
Originally nicknamed "iron lungs" when introduced in the 1920s and
1930s, mechanical ventilators are sometimes also called respirators.
They use pressure to blow air - or a mixture of gases such as oxygen
and air - into the lungs.
They can be set to exhale it, too, effectively taking over a
patient's entire breathing process when their lungs fail. The aim is
to give the body enough time to fight off an infection to be able to
breathe independently and recover.
Some patients need them because they're losing the strength to
breathe, said Yoram Weiss, director of Hadassah Ein Kerem Medical
Center in Jerusalem. "It is very important to ventilate them before
they collapse." At his hospital, 24 of 223 people with COVID-19 had
been put on ventilators by April 13. Of those, four had died and
three had come off the machines.
AEROSOLS
Simpler forms of ventilation - face masks for example - are easier
to administer. But respirator masks can release micro-droplets known
as aerosols which may spread infection. Some doctors said they
avoided the masks, at least at first, because of that risk.
While mechanical ventilators do not produce aerosols, they carry
other risks. Intubation requires patients to be heavily sedated so
their respiratory muscles fully surrender. The recovery can be
lengthy, with a risk of permanent lung damage.
Now that the initial wave of COVID-19 cases has peaked in many
countries, doctors have time to examine other ways of managing the
disease and are fine-tuning their approach.
Voshaar, the German lung specialist, said some doctors were
approaching COVID-19 lung problems as they would other forms of
pneumonia. In a healthy patient, oxygen saturation - a measure of
how much oxygen the haemoglobin in the blood contains - is around
96% of the maximum amount the blood can hold. When doctors check
patients and see lower levels, indicating hypoxia, Voshaar said,
they can overreact and race to intubate.
"We lung doctors see this all the time," Voshaar told Reuters. "We
see 80% and still do nothing and let them breathe spontaneously. The
patient doesn't feel great, but he can eat and drink and sit on the
side of his bed."
He and other doctors think other tests can help before intubation.
Voshaar looks at a combination of measures including how fast the
patient is breathing and their heart rate. His team are also guided
by lung scans.
"HAPPY HYPOXICS"
Several doctors in New York said they too had started to consider
how to treat patients, known as "happy hypoxics," who can talk and
laugh with no signs of mental cloudiness even though their oxygen
might be critically low.
Rather than rushing to intubate, doctors say they now look for other
ways to boost the patients' oxygen. One method, known as "proning,"
is telling or helping patients to roll over and lie on their fronts,
said Scott Weingart, head of emergency critical care at Stony Brook
University Medical Center on Long Island.
"If patients are left in one position in bed, they tend to
desaturate, they lose the oxygen in their blood," Weingart said.
Lying on the front shifts any fluid in the lungs to the front and
frees up the back of the lungs to expand better. "The position
changes have radically impressive effects on the patient's oxygen
saturations."
Weingart does recommend intubating a communicative patient with low
oxygen levels if they start to lose mental clarity, if they
experience a cytokine storm or if they start to really struggle to
breathe. He feels there are enough ventilators for such patients at
his hospital.
But for happy hypoxics, "I still don't want these patients on
ventilators, because I think it's hurting them, not helping them."
QUALITY, SKILL
As governments in the United States and elsewhere are scrambling to
raise output of ventilators, some doctors worry the fast-built
machines may not be up to snuff.
Doctors in Spain wrote to their local government to complain that
ventilators it had bought were designed for use in ambulances, not
intensive care units, and some were of poor quality. In the UK, the
government has cancelled an order for thousands of units of a simple
model because more sophisticated devices are needed.
More important, many doctors say, is that the additional machines
will need highly trained and experienced operators.
"It's not just about running out of ventilators, it's running out of
expertise," said David Hill, a pulmonology and critical care
physician in Waterbury, Connecticut, who attends at Waterbury
Hospital.
Long-term ventilation management is complex, but Hill said some U.S.
hospitals were trying to bring non-critical care physicians up to
speed fast with webinars or even tip sheets. "That is a recipe for
bad outcomes."
"We intensivists don't ventilate by protocol," said Hill. "We may
choose initial settings," he said, "but we adjust those settings.
It's complicated."
(Escritt reported from Berlin, Aloisi from Milan, Beasley from Los
Angeles, Borter from New York and Kelland from London. Additional
reporting: Alexander Cornwell in Abu Dhabi, Panu Wongcha-um in
Bangkok, Maayan Lubell in Jerusalem, A. Ananthalakshmi and Rozanna
Latif in Kuala Lumpur, Kristina Cooke in Los Angeles, Sonya Dowsett
in Madrid, Jonathan Allen and Nicholas Brown in New York, John Mair
in Sydney, Costas Pitas in London, David Shepardson in Washington
DC, Brenda Goh in Wuhan and John Miller in; Zurich. Writing by
Andrew RC Marshall and Kate Kelland; Edited by Sara Ledwith and
Jason Szep)
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