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This is a plain English summary of an original research article. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and reviewer(s) at the time of publication.

In acutely ill adults, liberal use of oxygen supplementation is found to increase the risk of death compared with more conservative oxygen strategies. More liberal oxygen therapy increases patient mortality in hospital by about 11 deaths amongst every 1,000 people exposed. Deaths also increase after 30 days follow-up, without improving other important health outcomes, such as disability, infection or length of hospital stay.

Oxygen is routinely used for acutely ill patients and is widely considered by healthcare professionals to be beneficial, or at worst, a completely harmless therapy. Indeed, adequate oxygen therapy is essential if oxygen levels are low. However, concerns are increasing about over-use of oxygen or liberal use (when the saturation of peripheral blood with oxygen reaches more than 96%) and its potentially harmful adverse effects.

This systematic review and meta-analysis represents high-quality evidence combining international data from 25 randomised controlled trials. The findings support conservative use of oxygen therapy, to raise blood levels no higher than needed, and will inform guidelines to sufficiently outline the risks, alongside the benefits, of supplemental oxygen use in the acutely ill.

Why was this study needed?

In the UK, approximately one-third of patients in ambulances and a quarter of patients in emergency rooms are treated with supplemental oxygen. However, oxygen therapy is not always beneficial. Hyperoxaemia, a state of abnormally high blood oxygen levels, has been associated with adverse clinical outcomes in people with respiratory failure, stroke, and heart attack.

Current guidelines recommend oxygen to treat only low blood oxygen and to raise oxygen no higher than a narrow therapeutic range. However, in clinical practice, between 50-73% of critically ill patients in intensive care are given excess oxygen therapy and become hyperoxaemic.

Disparity in practice may be because of uncertainty concerning the benefit and harms of oxygen therapy in acutely ill patients. A number of randomised controlled trials exist that compare different oxygen strategies in various acute illnesses; however, this is the first review to synthesise this information.

What did this study do?

The IOTA systematic review and meta-analysis pooled the results of 25 randomised controlled trials. The 16,037 participants required non-elective hospital admission for acute illnesses including sepsis, critical illness, stroke, trauma, myocardial infarction, and cardiac arrest. The average age was 64 years. Six studies were conducted in the UK.

The studies compared liberal and conservative oxygenation strategies. In each study, the treatment group with higher oxygen supplementation was categorised as liberal (median baseline oxygen saturation of peripheral blood across trials, 96%, range 94-99%), and the group with lower oxygen supplementation achieving saturation less than this was conservative. The trials in this study were generally high quality.

On average, supplementation of oxygen was substantially higher in the liberal treatment group. However, this varied greatly across studies. Such variation may underestimate true differences between groups. Importantly, this review excluded studies focused on chronic respiratory disease.

What did it find?

  • Liberal oxygen therapy was associated with increased mortality in hospital compared with conservative oxygen therapy, (relative risk [RR] 1.21, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.03 to 1.43; 11 more deaths per 1,000 treated; 19 trials, 15,071 participants).
  • Mortality at 30 days after admission was also increased (RR 1.41, 95% CI 1.01 to 1.29; 14 more deaths per 1,000 treated; 14 trials, 15,053 participants).
  • There was no difference in disability following a stroke or traumatic brain injury between liberal and conservative oxygen therapy (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.62 to 1.41; 5 trials, 5,523 participants).
  • There was no difference between treatment groups for hospital-acquired pneumonia (RR 1.00, 95% CI 0.74 to 1.35; 4 trials, 1,785 participants).
  • There was no difference between treatment groups for length of hospital stay (mean difference 0.25 fewer days, 95% CI 0.68 fewer to 0.18 more days in hospital; 12 trials, 2,448 participants).

What does current guidance say on this issue?

The British Thoracic Society 2017 guideline for oxygen use in adults in healthcare and emergency settings states that oxygen should be used as a treatment for low blood oxygen, not breathlessness.

The guideline recommends immediate high-concentration oxygen for critically ill patients, but that this should be prescribed to achieve target oxygen saturations of between 94 to 98% for most acutely ill patients, and 88 to 92% for those at risk of hypercapnic (high blood carbon dioxide) respiratory failure. Those administering oxygen should monitor the patient to keep within target range.

What are the implications?

The increased mortality observed in this study makes it clear that excessive treatment with oxygen should be avoided.

This evidence points to a slightly lower upper threshold for safe oxygen supplementation. This could, therefore, offer an improvement on existing guideline advice. Healthcare professionals should take care not to exceed such recommended boundaries amongst the acutely ill.

This review did not include evidence from those being treated for chronic respiratory diseases, and these patients will require modified targets.

Citation and Funding

Chu DK, Kim LH, Young PJ, et al. Mortality and morbidity in acutely ill adults treated with liberal versus conservative oxygen therapy (IOTA): a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet. 2018;391(10131):1693-1705.

Bibliography

Hale KE, Gavin C, O’Driscoll BR. Audit of oxygen use in emergency ambulances and in a hospital emergency department. Emerg Med J. 2008;25(11):773-6.

Helmerhorst HJ, Schultz MJ, van der Voort PH, et al. Self-reported attitudes versus actual practice of oxygen therapy by ICU physicians and nurses. Ann Intensive Care. 2014;4(1):23.

Kelly CA, Lynes D, O'Brien MR, Shaw B. A wolf in sheep's clothing? Patients’ and healthcare professionals’ perceptions of oxygen therapy: An interpretative phenomenological analysis. Clin Respir J. 2018;12(2):616-32.

Suzuki S, Eastwood GM, Peck L, Glassford NJ, Bellomo R. Current oxygen management in mechanically ventilated patients: a prospective observational cohort study. J Crit Care. 2013;28(5):647-54.

Produced by the University of Southampton and Bazian on behalf of NIHR through the NIHR Dissemination Centre


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