Republished from: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/22/health/breathing-tubes-intubation-older-patients.html
One-third of patients over age 65 die in the hospital after they are put on ventilators. Doctors are beginning to wonder if the procedure should be used so often.
By Paula Span
June 22, 2018
June 22, 2018
Earlier this year, an ambulance brought a man in his 80s to
the emergency room at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. He had metastatic
lung cancer; his family had arranged for hospice care at home.
But when he grew less alert and began struggling to breathe,
his son tearfully called 911.
“As soon as I met them, his son said, ‘Put him on a
breathing machine,’” recalled Dr. Kei Ouchi, an emergency physician and
researcher at the hospital.
Hospice patients know that they’re close to death; they and
their families have also been instructed that most distressing symptoms, like
shortness of breath, can be eased at home.
But the son kept insisting, “Why can’t you put him on a
breathing machine?”
Dr. Ouchi, lead author of a new study of how older people
fare after emergency room intubation, knew this would be no simple decision.
“I went into emergency medicine thinking I’d be saving
lives. I used to be very satisfied putting patients on a ventilator,” he told
me in an interview.
But he began to realize that while intubation is indeed
lifesaving, most older patients came to the E.R. with serious illnesses. “They
sometimes have values and preferences beyond just prolonging their lives,” he
said.
Often, he’d see the same people he’d intubated days later,
still in the hospital, very ill, even unresponsive. “Many times, a daughter
would say, ‘She would never have wanted this.’”
Like all emergency doctors, he’d been trained to perform the
procedure — sedating the patient, putting a plastic tube down his throat and
then attaching him to a ventilator that would breathe for him.
But, he said, “I was never trained to talk to patients or
their families about what this means.”
His study, published in the Journal of the American
Geriatrics Society, reveals more about that.
Analyzing 35,000 intubations of adults over age 65, data
gathered from 262 hospitals between 2008 and 2015, Dr. Ouchi and his colleagues
found that a third of those patients die in the hospital despite intubation
(also called “mechanical ventilation”).
Of potentially greater importance to elderly patients — who
so often declare they’d rather die than spend their lives in nursing homes —
are the discharge statistics.
Only a quarter of intubated patients go home from the
hospital. Most survivors, 63 percent, go elsewhere, presumably to nursing
facilities. The study doesn’t address
whether they face short rehab stays or become permanent residents.
But it does document the crucial role that age plays.
After intubation, 31 percent of patients ages 65 to 74
survive the hospitalization and return home. But for 80- to 84-year-olds, that
figure drops to 19 percent; for those over age 90, it slides to 14 percent.
At the same time, the mortality rate climbs sharply, to 50
percent in the eldest cohort from 29 percent in the youngest.
All intubated patients proceed to intensive care, most
remaining sedated because intubation is uncomfortable. If they were conscious,
patients might try to pull out the tubes or the I.V.’s delivering nutrition and
medications. They cannot speak.
Intubation “is not a walk in the park,” Dr. Ouchi said.
“This is a significant event for older adults. It can really change your life,
if you survive.”
A study at Yale University in 2015 following older adults
before and after an I.C.U. stay (average age: 83) confirmed what many
geriatricians already understood. Depending on how disabled patients are before
a critical illness, they’re likely to see a decline in their function afterward,
or to die within a year.
Those who underwent intubation had more than twice the
mortality risk of other I.C.U. patients. “You don’t get better, most of the
time,” said Dr. Ouchi. While outcomes remain hard to predict, “a lot of times,
you get worse.”
Intubation rates are projected to increase. But so has the
use of alternatives known as “noninvasive ventilation” — primarily the bipap
device, short for bi-level positive airway pressure.
A tightfitting mask over the nose and mouth helps patients
with certain conditions breathe nearly as well as intubation does. But they
remain conscious and can have the mask removed briefly for a sip of water or a
short conversation.
When researchers at the Mayo Clinic undertook an analysis of
the technique, reviewing 27 studies of noninvasive ventilation in patients with
do-not-intubate or comfort-care-only orders, they found that most survived to
discharge. Many, treated on ordinary hospital floors, avoided intensive care.
“There are cases where noninvasive ventilation is comparable
or even superior to mechanical ventilation,” said Dr. Douglas White, a critical
care physician and ethicist at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.
Dr. Ouchi, for instance, explained to his patient’s
distraught son that intubation would thwart his father’s desire to remain
communicative. The patient, able to see though not to say much, died four days
later in a hospital room with bipap and morphine to reduce his “air hunger.”
Most patients in the Mayo review died within a year, too.
But bipap may provide an interim option, giving families and physicians time to
decide together whether to intubate an ailing older patient, who at this point
probably can’t direct his own care.
The harried emergency room environment, after all, hardly
encourages thoughtful discussions about patients’ prognoses and wishes. Those
can become fraught conversations anyway, as Dr. White’s previous research has
demonstrated.
His 2016 study showed that when physicians and surrogate
decision makers have very different expectations about a critically ill
patient’s odds of recovery, it’s not merely because family members fail to grasp
what the physician explained.
“Other things get in the way of making good decisions,” Dr.
White pointed out. “A lot of this has to do with psychological and emotional
factors” — like “optimism bias” (Most people with this condition will die, but
not my mom) or “performative optimism” (If we maintain hope, our mom will get
better).
In their most recent study, he and his colleagues
experimented with a support program for families with relatives in I.C.U.s.,
nearly all intubated.
When a specially-trained nurse checked in daily to explain
developments and answer questions, families rated their communications more
highly and felt more satisfied with their loved ones’ care.
The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s health system
has begun adopting the program in its 40 I.C.U.s.
But discussing how aggressively an older person wants to be
treated remains a conversation — probably a series of them — best held before a
crisis.
Intubation, for instance, is often something a physician can
foresee. Older patients who have
cardio-respiratory conditions (emphysema, lung cancer, heart failure), or who
are prone to pneumonia, or who have entered the later stages of Alzheimer's or
Parkinson's disease — any of them may be nearing this crossroads.
When they do, Dr. Michael Wilson, a critical care physician
at the Mayo Clinic, opts for a particularly humane approach.
As he recently described in JAMA Internal Medicine, before
he inserts the tube, he explains to the patient and family that while he and
the staff will do everything they can, people in this circumstance may die.
“You may later wake up and do fine,” he tells his patient.
“Or this may be the last time to communicate with your family,” because
intubated patients can’t talk.
Since setting up intubation generally takes a few minutes,
he encourages people to spend them sharing words of comfort, reassurance and
affection. Without that pause, “I have stolen the last words from patients,” he
told me.
His editorial has drawn attention from critical care
physicians around the world.
Dr. Wilson has used this approach about 50 times in his
I.C.U., so he has learned what patients and families, given this opportunity,
tell one another.
“It’s nearly always, ‘I love you,’” he said. “‘I hope you do
well.’”
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