TY - JOUR
T1 - Awake Supraglottic Airway Placement in Pediatric Patients for Airway Obstruction or Difficult Intubation
T2 - Insights From an International Airway Registry (PeDI)
AU - the PeDI Collaborative Investigators
AU - Longacre, Mckenna
AU - Park, Raymond S.
AU - Staffa, Steven J.
AU - Rowland, Matthew J.
AU - Meserve, Jonathan
AU - Lord, Charles
AU - Templeton, T. Wesley
AU - Garcia-Marcinkiewicz, Annery G.
AU - Peyton, James M.
AU - Fiadjoe, John E.
AU - Kovatsis, Pete
AU - Stein, Mary Lyn
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 International Anesthesia Research Society.
PY - 2025/2/1
Y1 - 2025/2/1
N2 - BACKGROUND: Small case series have described awake supraglottic airway placement in infants with significant airway obstruction and difficult intubations. We conducted this study to determine outcomes when supraglottic airways were placed in awake children enrolled in the international Pediatric Difficult Intubation Registry including success of ventilation, success of tracheal intubation, and complications. METHODS: We reviewed the Pediatric Difficult Intubation Registry to identify all cases of awake supraglottic airway placement before planned tracheal intubation from August 2012 to September 2023 with subsequent review of details of awake supraglottic airway placement in the medical record. We present descriptive statistics of patient demographics, ventilation and intubation outcomes, and complications. RESULTS: A supraglottic airway was placed in an awake child in 95 of 8061 (1.2%) cases in the Pediatric Difficult Intubation Registry. Median age was 37 days (range 0-17.6 years) and median weight was 3.7 kg (1.6-46.7 kg). Sixteen (17%) cases were in patients older than 2 years and 7 (7%) were in adolescents. Adequate ventilation via a supraglottic airway was achieved in 81/95 (85%, 95% confidence interval [CI], 77%-93%) encounters. Inadequate (n = 13) or impossible (n = 1) ventilation occurred in 14/95 (15%). No complications were reported with supraglottic airway placement. For subsequent intubation, there was a 35% (33/95) first-attempt success rate and 99% (94/95) eventual success, with 1 patient awakened after failed attempts at tracheal intubation. Hypoxia occurred during the first intubation attempt in 9/95 (9%) encounters. The incidence of hypoxia was lower in encounters in which ventilation via the supraglottic airway was adequate (4/81, 5%) than in encounters in which ventilation via the supraglottic airway was inadequate or impossible (5/14, 36%). CONCLUSIONS: Although infrequently attempted, awake placement of a supraglottic airway in children with difficult airways achieved adequate ventilation and provided a conduit for oxygenation and ventilation after induction of anesthesia across a spectrum of ages.
AB - BACKGROUND: Small case series have described awake supraglottic airway placement in infants with significant airway obstruction and difficult intubations. We conducted this study to determine outcomes when supraglottic airways were placed in awake children enrolled in the international Pediatric Difficult Intubation Registry including success of ventilation, success of tracheal intubation, and complications. METHODS: We reviewed the Pediatric Difficult Intubation Registry to identify all cases of awake supraglottic airway placement before planned tracheal intubation from August 2012 to September 2023 with subsequent review of details of awake supraglottic airway placement in the medical record. We present descriptive statistics of patient demographics, ventilation and intubation outcomes, and complications. RESULTS: A supraglottic airway was placed in an awake child in 95 of 8061 (1.2%) cases in the Pediatric Difficult Intubation Registry. Median age was 37 days (range 0-17.6 years) and median weight was 3.7 kg (1.6-46.7 kg). Sixteen (17%) cases were in patients older than 2 years and 7 (7%) were in adolescents. Adequate ventilation via a supraglottic airway was achieved in 81/95 (85%, 95% confidence interval [CI], 77%-93%) encounters. Inadequate (n = 13) or impossible (n = 1) ventilation occurred in 14/95 (15%). No complications were reported with supraglottic airway placement. For subsequent intubation, there was a 35% (33/95) first-attempt success rate and 99% (94/95) eventual success, with 1 patient awakened after failed attempts at tracheal intubation. Hypoxia occurred during the first intubation attempt in 9/95 (9%) encounters. The incidence of hypoxia was lower in encounters in which ventilation via the supraglottic airway was adequate (4/81, 5%) than in encounters in which ventilation via the supraglottic airway was inadequate or impossible (5/14, 36%). CONCLUSIONS: Although infrequently attempted, awake placement of a supraglottic airway in children with difficult airways achieved adequate ventilation and provided a conduit for oxygenation and ventilation after induction of anesthesia across a spectrum of ages.
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U2 - 10.1213/ANE.0000000000006959
DO - 10.1213/ANE.0000000000006959
M3 - Article
C2 - 39446662
AN - SCOPUS:85208408105
SN - 0003-2999
VL - 140
SP - 310
EP - 316
JO - Anesthesia and analgesia
JF - Anesthesia and analgesia
IS - 2
ER -