Elsevier

Respiratory Medicine

Volume 105, Issue 2, February 2011, Pages 226-229
Respiratory Medicine

Agreement between arterial and transcutaneous PCO2 in patients undergoing non-invasive ventilation

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2010.11.010Get rights and content
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Summary

Aim

Transcutaneous carbon dioxide (PtCO2) monitoring offers a potentially non-invasive and continuous means to determine the arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2). ED studies of agreement between PtCO2 and PaCO2 have had conflicting findings and have not been targeted to subgroups with severe ventilatory disturbance such as those requiring non-invasive ventilation [NIV]. Our aim is to determine agreement between PtCO2 and PaCO2 for patients undergoing NIV for respiratory failure.

Methods

This prospective observational study included a convenience sample of patients undergoing NIV for respiratory failure who required arterial blood gas analysis as part of their care. Data collected included patient demographics, indication for NIV, diagnosis, vital signs, and pH, PaCO2 and PtCO2. The outcome of interest was agreement between PaCO2 and PtCO2. Analysis was made using descriptive statistics, Bland-Altman techniques, Mann–Whitney U test and Fisher/Chi square tests.

Results

46 comparisons were analysed. Median age was 69 [IQR 65–79], 67% male; median PaCO2 60 mmHg [IQR 46–70] and median pH 7.35 [IQR 7.30–7.38]. Average difference between PaCO2 and PtCO2 was 6.1 mmHg with 95% limits of agreement −10.1–22.3 mmHg. Thirty seven comparisons [80%] were within 10 mmHg [95% CI 66–90%]. Difference >10 mmHg was associated with increasing PaCO2 [p = 0.001; median difference 19.6 mmHg, 95% CI 9.2–30.4 mmHg]. All cases with difference >10 mmHg had PaCO2 > 60 mmHg.

Conclusion

In patients undergoing NIV, agreement between PaCO2 and PtCO2 was sub-optimal, with unacceptably wide 95% limits of agreement. PtCO2 cannot be recommended as a substitute for PaCO2 testing in this group.

Keywords

Transcutaneous carbon dioxide
Non-invasive ventilation
COPD

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